Pacific Management Group, BSC Leasing, Inc., Tax Matters Partner v. Commissioner , 2018 T.C. Memo. 131 ( 2018 )


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    T.C. Memo. 2018-131
    UNITED STATES TAX COURT
    PACIFIC MANAGEMENT GROUP, BSC LEASING, INC., TAX MATTERS
    PARTNER, ET AL.,1 Petitioners v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
    Docket Nos. 6411-07, 6412-07,               Filed August 20, 2018.
    6413-07, 6414-07,
    6494-07, 6498-07,
    6499-07, 6592-07,
    6593-07, 6594-07,
    6596-07.
    1
    Cases of the following petitioners are consolidated herewith: Cory M.
    Severson and Rochelle Severson, docket No. 6412-07; Pacific Aquascape Inter-
    national, Inc., docket No. 6413-07; Pacific Environmental Resources, Corp., dock-
    et No. 6414-07; Mark E. Krebs and Janet B. Krebs, docket No. 6494-07; Johan A.
    Perslow and Marie Majkgard Perslow, docket No. 6498-07; Pacific Aquascape,
    Inc., docket No. 6499-07; Curtis Hartwell, docket No. 6592-07; Pacific Advanced
    Civil Engineering, Inc., docket No. 6593-07; Richard F. Boultinghouse and
    Loraine Boultinghouse, docket No. 6594-07; and Johan A. Perslow, docket No.
    6596-07.
    -2-
    [*2] Ernest Scribner Ryder, Richard V. Vermazen, and Alvah Lavar Taylor, for
    petitioners.
    Kevin W. Coy, Heather K. McCluskey, Hans Famularo, and Jeffrey L.
    Heinkel, for respondent.
    MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
    LAUBER, Judge: These consolidated cases involve a complex tax shelter
    scheme featuring four C corporations, five individual shareholder-employees of
    the C corporations, five employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs), five S corpora-
    tions, and (inevitably) a partnership. This scheme was devised by Ernest S. Ryder,
    who serves as co-counsel for petitioners in these cases.2 The scheme relied in part
    on section 1361(c)(6),3 effective for tax years after 1997, which allowed ESOPs to
    2
    Tax Court Rule 24(g) provides that “[i]f any counsel of record * * * is a
    potential witness in a case, then such counsel must * * * withdraw from the case
    * * * or take whatever other steps are necessary to obviate a conflict of interest.”
    We ruled before trial that Mr. Ryder would not be required to withdraw, provided
    that the entire trial was conducted by Mr. Vermazen, his co-counsel, who does not
    have a conflict of interest. Neither party called Mr. Ryder as a witness during the
    trial.
    3
    Unless otherwise noted, all statutory references are to the Internal Revenue
    Code (Code) in effect for the years at issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax
    Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. We round all monetary amounts to the
    (continued...)
    -3-
    [*3] be shareholders of S corporations. See Small Business Job Protection Act of
    1996, Pub. L. No. 104-188, sec. 1316(a), 110 Stat. at 1785.
    Reduced to its essentials, the scheme worked as follows. The partnership
    extracted cash from the C corporations in the form of alleged “factoring fees” and
    “management fees.” The C corporations claimed deductions for these payments,
    wiping out substantial portions of their taxable income.
    The partnership distributed much of this cash to its five partners, each of
    which was an S corporation formed by one of the five individuals. The distribu-
    tions to each S corporation were made ratably on the basis of the corresponding
    individual’s ownership interest in the C corporations. Each individual received
    from his S corporation a salary, in whatever amount he believed necessary to sup-
    port his anticipated living expenses. The individuals reported those amounts as
    taxable income; the S corporations retained the rest of the cash and (after paying
    certain expenses) invested it for the individuals’ benefit.
    All of the stock of each S corporation was owned by an ESOP. The sole
    participant in (and beneficiary of) each ESOP was the individual who had formed
    the S corporation. Because the ESOPs were tax exempt, the distributions the S
    3
    (...continued)
    nearest dollar.
    -4-
    [*4] corporations received from the partnership (net of the salaries and benefits
    paid to the individuals) were purportedly exempt from current Federal income
    taxation. The desired end result, therefore, was largely to eliminate taxation of the
    operating profits at the C corporation level and defer indefinitely any taxation of
    those profits at the individual shareholder level, even though the profits had been
    distributed ratably for each shareholder’s benefit.
    Rightly concluding that this scheme was too good to be true, the Internal
    Revenue Service (IRS or respondent) attacked it on numerous grounds for tax
    years that (owing to calender and fiscal year differences) span 2002-2005. We
    hold that the “factoring fees” and most of the “management fees” were not
    deductible expenses of the C corporations but rather were disguised distributions
    of corporate profits. To the extent set forth below, we hold that these distributions
    were currently taxable to the individual shareholders of the C corporations as
    constructive dividends or as income improperly assigned to the S corporations.
    FINDINGS OF FACT
    Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulations of
    facts and the attached exhibits are incorporated by this reference. The record of
    these consolidated cases, including the trial transcript, the stipulations of facts, and
    the attached exhibits, totals many thousands of pages.
    -5-
    [*5] Rule 151(e)(3) requires that a party provide, for each proposed finding of
    fact, “references to the pages of the transcript or the exhibits or other sources
    relied upon to support the statement.” Respondent’s proposed findings of fact,
    occupying 140 pages of his opening brief, comply with this requirement.
    Petitioners’ proposed findings of fact, occupying 96 pages of their opening brief,
    frequently do not. Where facts are in doubt, we have done our best to locate
    support for petitioners’ version. But we have resolved uncertain matters in favor
    of respondent where petitioners have failed to support with record citations their
    proposed findings of fact. See 535 Ramona Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    135 T.C. 353
    ,
    359-360 (2010); Brewer Quality Homes, Inc. v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2003-
    200, 
    86 T.C.M. (CCH) 29
    , 30 n.3.
    Implementation of the tax shelter scheme entailed many thousands of cash
    transfers among 15 entities and individuals. In their proposed findings of fact the
    parties often do not agree on the net results of these transactions, or even on what
    the dollar amounts remaining in dispute actually are. We have done our best to
    work our way through this fog. We leave it to the parties’ Rule 155 computations
    to determine the final tax consequences of our redeterminations.
    -6-
    [*6] A.       The Water Companies and Their Shareholders
    The four C corporations whose tax liabilities are at issue are Pacific Aqua-
    scape, Inc. (PAQ), Pacific Aquascape International, Inc. (PAI), Pacific Advanced
    Civil Engineering (PACE), and Pacific Environmental Resources Corp. (PERC).
    We will sometimes refer to the C corporations collectively as the Water Compan-
    ies. Each of the Water Companies had its principal place of business in California
    when it filed its petition.
    The stock of the Water Companies was owned by five individuals: Johan
    Perslow, Cory Severson, Mark E. Krebs, Curtis S. Hartwell, and Richard Boulting-
    house. Some of them filed joint returns for certain years at issue; all ensuing refer-
    ences to individuals with these surnames are to petitioner husbands. We will
    sometimes refer to each petitioner husband as a “principal” of the Water Compa-
    nies and refer to them collectively as the “five principals.” All individual petition-
    ers resided in California when they filed their petitions.
    B.     Business Structure and Operations Before 2000
    The story begins with PAQ, which was formed in November 1987 by Mr.
    Perslow and Mr. Severson after a predecessor business, Pacific Lining Co., went
    bankrupt. PAQ’s work initially related chiefly to golf course development but
    later expanded to include designing, engineering, and constructing various aquatic
    -7-
    [*7] environments, including manmade lakes, waterfalls, streams, pools, and spas.
    PAQ had between 30 and 45 full-time employees in 1999 and added other workers
    as its projects required. As of December 31, 1999, PAQ’s officers and share-
    holders were as follows (percentages do not total 100% because of rounding):
    Individual               Office             % Ownership
    Perslow             Chairman/Secretary              41.0
    Severson            President/Treasurer             26.8
    Krebs               Vice president                  20.1
    Hartwell            Vice president                   8.0
    Boultinghouse       CFO                              4.0
    PACE was originally a division of PAQ, functioning as its in-house
    engineering design group. It was separately incorporated in 1994 with the same
    ownership structure as PAQ. PACE specialized in designing water resource
    systems, including flood control systems, wastewater systems, and recreational
    water features. PACE did most of its design work for projects on which PAQ
    performed construction. Its workforce grew from 30 employees in 1994 to 70
    employees in 2001. Its clientele correspondingly expanded from small land
    developers to include cities and counties throughout the southwestern United
    States, as well as major national developers. As of December 31, 1999, PACE’s
    officers and shareholders were as follows:
    -8-
    [*8]         Individual              Office               % Ownership
    Perslow            Chairman/Secretary               41.0
    Severson           President/Treasurer              26.8
    Krebs              Vice president                   20.1
    Hartwell           Vice president                    8.0
    Boultinghouse      CFO                               4.0
    PAI was incorporated in 1996 to perform in Nevada and Utah the same
    types of construction and engineering services that PAQ performed in California.
    Initially PAI had its own employees, who also worked on PAQ projects. PAI’s
    employees were later put on PAQ’s payroll, and PAI reimbursed PAQ for
    employee time spent on PAI projects. Mr. Perslow had no nominal ownership
    interest in PAI because of complications caused by a prior bankruptcy. PAI’s
    profits nevertheless appear to have been distributed roughly on the basis of the
    five principals’ ownership interests in PAQ and PACE.
    PERC was incorporated in 1998 to provide services as a general contractor
    for the other three companies. PERC arose out of PAQ’s need for wastewater
    treatment plants to ensure that its water systems were algae free. PERC was also
    the entity that bore the costs of any liability associated with the Water Companies’
    design and construction of wastewater treatment plants. PERC had 10 employees
    -9-
    [*9] in 2001, and its headcount tripled during the ensuing six years. As of
    December 31, 1999, PERC’s officers and shareholders were as follows:
    Individual              Office               % Ownership
    Perslow                 Chairman                    79.9
    Severson                President                   10.6
    Krebs                       ---                      7.9
    Boultinghouse           CFO                          1.6
    The Water Companies were all organized as C corporations during the tax
    years at issue, apparently because Mr. Perslow’s status as a foreign national made
    the S corporation structure unavailable. See sec. 1361(b)(1)(C). Although each
    company had its own website, the four functioned in most respects as a single
    integrated entity. They shared office space and overhead costs, used the same
    accounting and administrative staff, and used the same IT personnel and email
    system.
    Sherry Quarry, who began working for the Water Companies in 1994, man-
    aged the corporate ledgers, made payments on accounts payable, and prepared cli-
    ent invoices. Two or more companies often worked on the same client project.
    The accounting software enabled her to generate debits and credits for cross-
    company services, whereby each company would be charged expenses in propor-
    - 10 -
    [*10] tion to the services it consumed. These expenses included (among other
    things) employee wages and benefits, rent payments, and overhead and facility
    costs.
    Before 2000 Mr. Perslow was employed and paid by PERC, Mr. Severson
    and Mr. Hartwell were employed and paid by PAQ, and Mr. Krebs and Mr. Boult-
    inghouse were employed and paid by PACE. The employing company was then
    reimbursed by the other Water Companies for the time its employee devoted to the
    other companies’ assignments. Before 2000 the Water Companies had a bonus
    program for staff employees and a separate bonus pool for the five principals, who
    received bonuses only if the companies had sufficient cashflow. Petitioners
    submitted no evidence to establish, for years before 2000, the amounts of the
    bonuses the five principals received, the manner in which those bonuses were
    determined, or the ratio of their bonuses to their basic pay.
    The Water Companies experienced substantial growth between 1990 and
    1999. Their aggregate revenues increased from approximately $3 million to more
    than $20 million during this period. They doubled their employee count during
    these years.
    - 11 -
    [*11] C.     Business Structure and Operations After 1999
    By 1999 the Water Companies had multi-million-dollar contracts with nu-
    merous landowners. Although they and their shareholders were prospering, they
    were unhappy that operating income was subject to tax separately at the corporate
    and shareholder levels. Like many taxpayers during those boom years, they
    sought professional advice in search of a solution to this perceived problem.
    In August 1999 the five principals were introduced to Mr. Ryder, whose
    practice focused on employee benefit plans. He specialized in creating tax struc-
    tures that purportedly enabled shareholder-employees to defer taxation of a sub-
    stantial portion of their income, free of the normal limitations on contributions to
    qualified retirement plans, and pay tax only on income needed to defray current
    living expenses. The balance of the income would accumulate in a retirement ac-
    count or tax-free entity and remain tax deferred until the owners elected to take
    distributions.
    Mr. Ryder proposed two related strategies designed to minimize the tax lia-
    bilities of the C corporations and maximize tax-deferred income for the five prin-
    cipals. He proposed an “employee leasing/deferred compensation plan” involving
    a newly created S corporation for each of the five principals. All of the stock of
    each S corporation would be owned by an ESOP whose sole participant would be
    - 12 -
    [*12] that principal. He also proposed an “accounts receivable factoring”
    program.
    Under Mr. Ryder’s scheme, a partnership would extract cash from the C
    corporations in the form of alleged “management fees” and “factoring fees,” thus
    eliminating most of the Water Companies’ taxable income. The partnership would
    transfer this cash to (or for the benefit of) the S corporations, ratably to each prin-
    cipal’s approximate percentage ownership interest in the C corporations. Each
    principal would receive (and pay tax on) a salary from his S corporation. But most
    of the cash would accumulate tax free in the five S corporations because all of the
    stock of each was owned by an ESOP, a tax-exempt entity.
    The five principals formally engaged Mr. Ryder’s services in October 1999.
    He agreed to design a structure that would achieve petitioners’ tax goals by
    creating “5 corporations, 5 ESOPs, 2 or more Partnerships, 2 or more Management
    Service Agreements, and 2 or More Master Factoring Arrangements.” He agreed
    to supply an opinion letter on the purported validity of the structure and represent
    petitioners should the structure be challenged by the IRS. As compensation for his
    efforts, the Water Companies agreed to pay Mr. Ryder a $50,000 documentation
    fee and an annual fee computed as 6.33% of “the income earned by the S
    corporations that is not subject to immediate taxation.”
    - 13 -
    [*13] 1.     Documents and Agreements Underlying the Tax-Minimization Plan
    In October 1999 Mr. Ryder formed (and elected S-status for) a new “one-
    man” corporation for each of the five principals. We will refer to these entities as
    Perslow Inc., Severson Inc., Krebs Inc., Hartwell Inc., and Boultinghouse Inc., and
    collectively as the S corporations. Each S corporation had the same address as the
    Water Companies.
    Each S corporation sponsored an ESOP. The sole participant in (and bene-
    ficiary of) each ESOP was the principal for whom the S corporation had been
    formed. During the tax years at issue, each ESOP owned 100% of the stock of its
    sponsoring S corporation.4
    Each principal purportedly executed with his S corporation an “agreement
    of employment” by which he agreed to furnish services as an employee. The
    agreements did not specify what positions the principals were to hold or what
    duties they were to perform. Rather, the agreements simply recited that each
    principal would “render and perform services under the direction and designation
    of” his respective S corporation. The agreements entitled each principal to receive
    “base monthly compensation” and also to receive additional compensation, if
    4
    The record contains no documentary evidence concerning the tax treatment
    of the five ESOPs. However, respondent has not challenged their validity and
    does not dispute that the IRS originally recognized their tax-exempt status.
    - 14 -
    [*14] authorized by the S corporation, in relation to the principal’s “individual
    productivity and services to, and longevity with,” the S corporation.
    On November 1, 1999, Mr. Ryder formed two California general partner-
    ships, Pacific Management Group (sometimes referred to as Pacific Management
    Co.) (PMG) and PERC Management Group. The two partnerships merged, pur-
    portedly on January 1, 2000, with PMG as the surviving entity. (The evidence at
    trial established that the merger agreement was created on September 30, 2002,
    and backdated to January 1, 2000.) For ease of reference we will refer to both
    partnerships as PMG for all years.
    The partners in PMG, all denominated general partners, were the S corpora-
    tions. Four of the S corporations were partners from the outset. Hartwell Inc. was
    added as a partner on January 1, 2001, and received an 8.02% interest. At that
    time PMG had capital accounts of $2,642,296. Thus, Hartwell Inc. should have
    made an initial capital contribution in excess of $200,000. In fact, it made a
    capital contribution of $87.
    Each S corporation’s percentage interest in PMG approximated the corre-
    sponding principal’s aggregate ownership interest in the C corporations.5 To en-
    5
    The five principals held (or regarded themselves as holding) identical own-
    ership interests in PAQ, PAI, and PACE but different ownership interests in
    (continued...)
    - 15 -
    [*15] sure that each S corporation’s interest in PMG continued to approximate its
    respective principal’s ownership percentage in the Water Companies, the S
    corporations entered into mutual buy/sell agreements. As reflected on the
    Schedules K-1, Partner’s Share of Income, Deductions, Credits, etc., included in
    PMG’s partnership tax returns, the S corporations as of December 31, 2002, had
    the following percentage ownership interests in PMG (amounts do not total 100%
    because of rounding):
    S Corporation            % Interest
    Perslow Inc.                  38.6
    Severson Inc.                 27.6
    Krebs Inc.                    21.0
    Hartwell Inc.                  7.6
    Boultinghouse Inc.             5.3
    The partnership agreement stated that the “primary purpose of the partner-
    ship is to provide business, management, and financial services to clients of the
    Partnership.” To enable PMG to do this, each S corporation agreed to supply
    5
    (...continued)
    PERC. Each S corporation’s ownership interest in PERC Management Group,
    before it merged with PMG, was determined by the corresponding principal’s
    ownership interest in PERC. After PERC Management Group merged into PMG,
    the S corporations’ ownership interests in PMG were adjusted accordingly.
    - 16 -
    [*16] PMG with the services of its “employee.” The partnership agreement stated
    that each S corporation would also devote, through its principal, “whatever time
    and attention is necessary to manage and conduct the business of the Partnership.”
    On November 15, 1999, PMG supposedly entered into Independent Con-
    tractor Agreements for Management Services (ICAs) with the Water Companies.
    Under the ICAs, PMG (denominated the “consultant”) agreed to supply to the
    Water Companies (denominated the “client”) the “management services” that the
    five principals supplied to PMG. These “management services” consisted of sub-
    stantially the same services that the five principals had previously performed for
    the Water Companies directly as its officers and employees. These services
    included “design, engineering and construction services,” “construction manage-
    ment services,” and “value engineering.” All services were to be performed on
    site at the Water Companies’ office in Huntington Beach.
    The ICAs stated that PMG would issue monthly invoices to the Water Com-
    panies for “management fees” in exchange for the services the five principals sup-
    plied. These management fees took the form of “base monthly compensation”
    plus “discretionary bonuses.” The ICAs nominally entitled PMG to render
    management services to clients other than the Water Companies, but there is no
    - 17 -
    [*17] evidence in the record that PMG ever did this (or that the parties ever
    intended that PMG would do this).6
    The Water Companies (except PERC) entered into “Master Factoring
    Agreements” (MFAs) with PMG with a supposed effective date of November 15,
    1999. “Factoring” is a financial transaction by which one party (the factor)
    provides services to another party (the client) and is compensated by payment of
    factoring fees. The services that the factor provides typically include: (1) pur-
    chasing the client’s accounts receivable for cash, (2) collecting on the accounts
    receivable from the account debtors, and (3) assuming the downside risk if an
    account debtor becomes insolvent. Factoring benefits the client by enabling it to
    monetize an illiquid asset immediately. In exchange for its services the factor
    receives a fee, typically computed as a discount from the face amount of the
    receivables.
    The Water Companies had never investigated factoring as a financial tool
    before they met Mr. Ryder. Before adopting his “factoring” proposal, they did not
    6
    The base compensation the five principals received during 2002-2005 sub-
    stantially exceeded the base compensation specified in the ICAs, as most recently
    amended in 2000. In 2006, during the IRS audit, Mr. Ryder’s firm prepared new
    employment agreements (and corresponding corporate action documents) reciting
    the higher amounts of base compensation, then backdated all of those documents
    to the relevant prior years.
    - 18 -
    [*18] investigate the availability or the cost of factoring with banks or financial
    institutions. Boultinghouse admitted to Ms. Quarry that the main purpose of the
    factoring arrangement was tax deferral.
    Under the MFAs, PMG purportedly purchased from the Water Companies
    (except PERC) accounts receivable that they assigned to it. Because PMG had
    virtually no capital--the total capital contributed by its five partners was $2,087--it
    initially lacked the funds necessary to purchase the receivables. It thus deferred its
    alleged “factoring” activity until it had received sufficient “management fees”
    from the Water Companies.
    PMG began its alleged factoring activity in October 2000. It earned “factor-
    ing fees” equal to the difference between the face amount of the receivables and its
    discounted purchase price. None of the factoring agreements specified what dis-
    count would be applied. The discounts in fact applied were 5%, 4%, and 4% for
    PACE, PAI, and PAQ, respectively. Boultinghouse apparently picked these rates
    after making inquiries to several banks about “typical” rates. The factoring agree-
    ments included the following terms:
    • The Water Companies would sell the accounts receivable to PMG on a
    nonrecourse basis, with title passing to PMG.
    - 19 -
    [*19] • PMG would purchase the accounts receivable and remit payment to the
    Water Companies as soon as the assignment of the receivables was
    completed.
    • Funds collected on accounts receivable would be deposited into a bank
    account titled in PMG’s name. PMG accepted the risk of loss for non-
    collectible accounts. However, the Water Companies were to act as
    collection agents for PMG, with PMG supposedly reimbursing the Water
    Companies for the collection services provided by their employees.
    • The Water Companies would provide PMG with security interests in their
    present and future accounts receivable (but in no other assets).
    • The Water Companies would not notify their clients (the account debtors)
    that the accounts were being sold to PMG.
    2.     Operations Under the Tax-Minimization Plan
    The implementation of Mr. Ryder’s tax-minimization strategy caused no
    change in how the Water Companies conducted their business or related to the
    outside world. All present and future clients executed contracts with the Water
    Companies as they had done previously. The five principals retained their pre-
    existing titles as officers of the Water Companies, and clients continued to interact
    with them as they had done before.
    Boultinghouse (for example) had previously been the CFO of all four Water
    Companies. Under Mr. Ryder’s tax structure, Boultinghouse remained the CFO of
    all four companies, and he continued to provide them with exactly the same finan-
    cial and accounting services he had supplied previously. But now he supplied
    - 20 -
    [*20] those services as an “employee” of his S corporation, which allegedly
    supplied his services to PMG, which allegedly supplied his services as an
    “independent contractor” to the Water Companies.
    Water Company clients were not aware of PMG’s existence and engaged in
    no business activity with it. PMG had no employees, no telephone system, no
    email address, and no website. Its books and records were kept by Water Com-
    pany employees, including Sherry Quarry, who also ran payroll for the S corpora-
    tions. The Water Companies’ accounting systems remained the same as previous-
    ly. All Water Company employees, including the five principals, recorded their
    time on timesheets exactly as they had done before. When recording time, each
    principal input a project code to indicate the Water Company to which his time
    should be billed.7
    The changes wrought by Mr. Ryder’s tax-minimization strategy occurred
    mostly on paper or in the form of electronic transactions. PMG’s receipts, in the
    form of “management fees” and “factoring fees,” were separated into three pools:
    7
    In 2002 PMG supposedly became the lessee of the building that housed the
    Water Companies. The five principals signed the lease on behalf of PMG; the
    lease made them personally liable for the rent payments. PMG then subleased the
    building back to PACE, and PACE reimbursed PMG for the rent owed to the les-
    sor. The evidence at trial established that the sublease agreements (and related
    corporate action documents) were created in 2006 and backdated to 2002.
    - 21 -
    [*21] Pool A-1 (performance bonuses), Pool A-2 (shareholder bonuses), and Pool
    B (working capital). Allocations to Pools A-1 and A-2 were determined according
    to a percentage of the Water Companies’ “normalized” profits. “Normalized”
    profits were calculated by adding back to the Water Companies’ reported profits
    the “factoring fees” and “management fees” paid to PMG, as well as interest
    expenses. These allocations were split 50-50 between the two pools. The
    remainder of PMG’s receipts were routed into Pool B. The Water Companies
    could (whenever necessary) access funds in these pools to pay their expenses,
    typically through a loan or a revolving line of credit.
    PMG used the profits in Pools A-1 and A-2 to make distributions to the S
    corporations, which were made in two tranches. The first tranche consisted of
    “guaranteed payments.” These payments were generally made monthly and cor-
    responded to the “base monthly compensation” due to the five principals under the
    ICAs. The “guaranteed payments” that PMG made to the S corporations during
    the tax years at issue were as follows:
    S Corporation          2002          2003         2004       2005
    Perslow Inc.            $234,000      $229,500      $282,000   $585,503
    Severson Inc.            195,000        203,000      274,000    430,850
    Krebs Inc.               168,000        175,000      233,750    342,700
    - 22 -
    [*22] Hartwell Inc.           134,000       125,000        137,200     200,650
    Boultinghouse Inc.      148,000       135,700        164,200     370,750
    Total                 879,500       868,200       1,091,150   1,930,453
    Out of these distributions the S corporations paid salaries to the five princi-
    pals, reimbursed the Water Companies for health insurance provided to the those
    individuals and their families, and paid certain other expenses. The S corporations
    provided each principal with Forms W-2, Wage and Tax Statement, reporting the
    salary amounts after withholding applicable employment taxes. The Form W-2
    wages the five principals received from their S corporations for the tax years at
    issue were as follows:
    Principal             2002        2003           2004       2005
    Perslow                 $182,400    $330,807       $220,512    $336,736
    Severson                 167,100          -0-       205,678     215,168
    Krebs                     94,800          98,000    121,059     188,855
    Hartwell                  97,941      113,440       119,788     111,487
    Boultinghouse             69,126          69,440     71,157      77,513
    Total                   611,367      611,687       738,194     929,759
    The second tranche of distributions that PMG made to the S corporations
    consisted of “bonuses.” These distributions were made intermittently, often at the
    - 23 -
    [*23] time bonuses were paid to the Water Companies’ rank and file employees.
    PMG made bonus distributions to the S corporations as follows:
    S Corporation           2003         2004       2005
    Perslow Inc.              $148,672     $8,500    $117,350
    Severson Inc.               52,500     69,000         77,200
    Krebs Inc.                 112,500     39,500         72,600
    Hartwell Inc.               12,000     19,500         17,500
    Boultinghouse Inc.          -0-        10,000         13,000
    Total                     325,672 146,500        297,650
    All PMG receipts not distributed to the S corporations were credited to their
    respective partner capital accounts. As reported on PMG’s tax returns, the part-
    ners’ capital accounts on January 1 of each year were as follows:
    S Corporation             2002          2003             2004            2005
    Perslow Inc.              $1,424,320     $1,755,840 $1,837,759          $2,321,438
    Severson Inc.                996,896      1,254,745      1,453,492          2,058,336
    Krebs Inc.                   754,564           957,161   1,083,328          1,843,808
    Hartwell Inc.                260,896           343,776      395,243          502,376
    Boultinghouse Inc.           195,117           241,162      292,749           49,524
    Total                     3,631,793      4,552,684      5,062,571          7,075,482
    All PMG receipts not distributed to the five principals currently were retained and
    invested for their benefit in accounts titled in the names of the S corporations.
    - 24 -
    [*24] Pursuant to the MFAs, PMG nominally purchased from PAQ, PAI, and
    PACE during the tax years at issue aggregate accounts receivable as follows:
    Year          A/R Purchased
    2002               $18,444,093
    2003                18,803,741
    2004                24,106,198
    2005                32,740,968
    The total “factoring fees” that PMG received from PAQ, PAI, and PACE in ex-
    change for its alleged services exceeded $3.5 million for these four years.
    The actual operation of PMG’s “factoring” activity differed in important re-
    spects from the manner in which factoring is typically conducted by financial in-
    stitutions. In a typical factoring arrangement, the factor assumes responsibility for
    collecting the purchased accounts. Under the PMG arrangement, by contrast, the
    Water Companies were to act as “collection agents” for PMG, the supposed factor.
    This was apparently done because the Water Companies did not wish their clients
    to know that their accounts had been “sold.”
    PMG was given a security interest in the Water Companies’ accounts re-
    ceivable. Contrary to normal “factoring” practice, however, PMG did not perfect
    its security interest by a Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) filing. Again, this was
    - 25 -
    [*25] evidently because the Water Companies did not wish their clients to know
    that their accounts had been “sold.”
    Both before and after implementation of the supposed “factoring” arrange-
    ment, Mr. Boultinghouse, in his capacity as CFO, was directly responsible for col-
    lecting on the Water Companies’ accounts, including past-due accounts. If ac-
    counts became delinquent, Mr. Boultinghouse would direct the Water Companies’
    employees to telephone clients to ascertain the expected payment date. If accounts
    remained delinquent, he would direct project managers or other high-level em-
    ployees to contact the clients. If accounts became seriously delinquent, he would
    consult with the staff of the Water Companies to determine whether mechanics
    liens should be filed or a collection agency retained.
    The MFAs stipulated that PMG would “reimburse” the Water Companies
    for these collection services. But there is no evidence in the record that such
    reimbursements were ever made. Nor is there any evidence about the manner in
    which such reimbursements were supposed to have been calculated.
    The actual operation of the supposed “factoring” activity also departed in
    several respects from the terms specified in the MFAs. PMG often made
    payments on accounts receivable before the Water Companies had executed forms
    assigning those accounts to PMG or verified the outstanding balances on the
    - 26 -
    [*26] accounts. This was contrary to the terms of the agreements and to accepted
    factoring practice.
    PMG often paid in installments for the accounts it “purchased,” rather than
    paying the entire purchase price to the Water Companies up front. In some cases
    payment was made in seven or eight installments spread over many months. This
    was contrary to the terms of the agreements and to standard factoring practice,
    whose goal is to provide the client with immediate liquidity. The evidence estab-
    lished that the timing of the supposed “factoring” payments was dictated, not by
    the terms of the MFAs, but by “when there was money in the bank to do it,” as Ms.
    Quarry testified.
    While factoring receivables theoretically enabled the Water Companies to
    accelerate their incoming cashflow, this benefit was illusory given how the “fac-
    toring” operated. PMG could not function as a “factor” without the management
    fees it received from the Water Companies, as shown by the 10-month delay in
    PMG’s commencement of “factoring.” See supra p. 17-18. In effect, the Water
    Companies had to provide working capital to PMG (rather than the other way
    around) to enable PMG to purchase the accounts receivable. Given this circular
    flow of funds, the “factoring” generated no liquidity benefits for the Water
    Companies.
    - 27 -
    [*27] The “factoring” arrangement between PMG and the Water Companies was
    insufficient to support the Water Companies’ working capital needs, chiefly be-
    cause of the large “management fees” they were paying to PMG. Consequently,
    the Water Companies each established lines of credit with PMG on which they
    could draw to fund their operations during the years at issue. The Water Compan-
    ies also borrowed regularly from each other as needed.
    D.    Transition to a New Structure After 2005
    Mr. Ryder informed the principals that the structure outlined above would
    no longer provide preferential tax treatment as of November 30, 2005, because
    Congress had amended the Code to prohibit single-participant ESOPs. See Eco-
    nomic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001, Pub. L. No. 107-16,
    sec. 656(d)(1), 115 Stat. at 135 (codified as section 409(p)); Rev. Rul. 2003-6,
    2003-
    1 C.B. 286
    .8 He accordingly advised that the existing ESOPs should be
    phased out and that new ESOPs would need to have more than 10 participants.
    On the basis of Mr. Ryder’s advice the principals formed and elected S stat-
    us for a new company, Water Speciality Group (WSG); formed new ESOPs inten-
    8
    Congress provided that the amendment codified as section 409(p) generally
    would apply to plan years beginning after December 31, 2004. The ESOPs had a
    plan year beginning December 1, 1999, with the result that the amendment would
    apply to their plan years beginning December 1, 2005.
    - 28 -
    [*28] ded to comply with the legislative amendment; and solicited other
    employees of the Water Companies to be “plan participants” in the newly formed
    ESOPs. WSG, its affiliated entities, and numerous individuals were petitioners in
    cases at 29 docket numbers that were originally consolidated with the 11 cases
    currently before the Court. On October 14, 2015, the parties filed a stipulation of
    settled issues that resolved all issues with respect to the WSG structure for taxable
    years 2006-2011, and decisions in those 29 cases have been entered.9
    E.    Tax Returns and IRS Examination for 2002-2005
    The Water Companies timely filed Forms 1120, U.S. Corporation Income
    Tax Return, for 2002-2005, on which they claimed deductions for (among other
    things) the “management fees” and “factoring fees” paid to PMG. PMG timely
    filed Forms 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income, for 2002-2005 and issued
    Schedules K-1 to the S corporations. The five principals timely filed (in some
    cases jointly) Forms 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, for 2002-2005, on
    which they reported the salaries they received from their S corporations and nomi-
    nal payments from the Water Companies. It is unclear what the latter payments
    covered.
    9
    A list of the docket numbers for the cases that were settled appears in Ap-
    pendix A. See infra p. 78.
    - 29 -
    [*29] The IRS selected all of these returns for examination. It determined numer-
    ous adjustments and issued notices of deficiency to the Water Companies, notices
    of deficiency to the five principals, and a notice of final partnership administrative
    adjustment (FPAA) to PMG. The parties have conceded or settled a variety of is-
    sues.10 Respondent has also made partial concessions on certain of the issues that
    remain in dispute. The issues remaining in dispute, with dollar amounts adjusted
    to reflect partial concessions, are as follows:
    • With respect to the four C corporations, the IRS allowed deductions for
    the portions of the “management fees” corresponding to the Form W-2 wages
    received by the five principals. It disallowed deductions for the balance of the
    “management fees” and for the totality of the “factoring fees.” The claimed
    deductions were disallowed on various alternative grounds, including failure to
    satisfy the requirements of section 162, lack of economic substance, and lack of
    arm’s-length pricing under section 482. After concessions (some of which
    10
    A description of the issues the parties have settled or explicitly conceded,
    by docket number, appears in Appendix B. See infra pp. 79-80. Petitioners did
    not challenge at trial or in their post-trial briefs any of the accuracy-related penal-
    ties that the IRS determined. The penalties are therefore deemed conceded to the
    extent we determine deficiencies. See Rule 151(e)(4) and (5); Petzoldt v. Com-
    missioner, 
    92 T.C. 661
    , 683 (1989); Schladweiler v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2000-351
    , aff’d, 28 F. App’x 602 (8th Cir. 2002).
    - 30 -
    [*30] reflected math errors), the adjustments remaining in dispute appear to be as
    follows:11
    Disallowed Management Fees
    Company               Year/Period              Amount
    PERC                  9/30/2002                $30,360
    9/30/2003                   -0-
    9/30/2004                   -0-
    9/30/2005                   -0-
    PACE                 12/31/2002                157,349
    12/31/2003                319,234
    12/31/2004              1,361,427
    12/31/2005              2,081,138
    PAQ                   6/30/2003                 19,464
    6/30/2004                 23,216
    6/30/2005                 10,756
    PAI                  3/31/2003                 24,077
    3/31/2004                 25,178
    3/31/2005                 25,473
    11
    Respondent has stipulated that any changes to the Water Companies’ ulti-
    mate tax liabilities will need to be apportioned under sections 1561-1563. We
    leave those apportionments to the parties’ Rule 155 computations.
    - 31 -
    [*31]                         Disallowed Factoring Fees
    Company                  Year/Period               Amount
    PACE                   12/31/2002                $350,834
    12/31/2003                 292,230
    12/31/2004                 456,487
    12/31/2005                 612,605
    PAQ                     6/30/2003                505,930
    6/30/2004                511,930
    6/30/2005                619,395
    PAI                     3/31/2003                 43,463
    3/31/2004                 79,756
    3/31/2005                 28,182
    • With respect to the individual petitioners, the IRS determined that disal-
    lowance of deductions for the corporate payments listed above generated taxable
    income for the five principals, either as constructive dividends or on another
    theory (assignment of income, lack of economic substance, or lack of arm’s-length
    pricing under section 482). After concessions, the amounts of individual taxable
    income remaining in dispute appear to be as follows:
    Principal       2002       2003       2004        2005
    Perslow           $30,664 $23,488       $46,928     $350,207
    Severson            1,056     18,969    122,477      259,259
    - 32 -
    [*32]       Krebs              61,164 173,075      137,688      217,748
    Hartwell           21,436     26,405    37,404       86,203
    Boultinghouse       -0-        -0-       -0-        304,205
    • With respect to PMG the IRS made the following alternative adjustments:
    (1) increased its ordinary income by disallowing deductions for various expenses
    and distributions to the S corporations; (2) disregarded, for lack of economic sub-
    stance, the S corporations and any transactions entered into between them and
    PMG; and (3) determined that the principals were PMG’s actual partners.
    OPINION
    I.      Burden of Proof
    The IRS’ determinations in a notice of deficiency or an FPAA are generally
    presumed correct, and taxpayers bear the burden of proving them erroneous. See
    Rule 142(a); Welch v. Helvering, 
    290 U.S. 111
    , 115 (1933); Republic Plaza Props.
    P’ship v. Commissioner, 
    107 T.C. 94
    , 104 (1996). Deductions are a matter of
    legislative grace, and taxpayers bear the burden of proving their entitlement to any
    deductions claimed and of substantiating the amounts underlying claimed deduc-
    tions. INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    503 U.S. 79
    , 84 (1992); New Colonial
    Ice Co. v. Helvering, 
    292 U.S. 435
    , 440 (1934); sec. 1.6001-1(a), Income Tax
    Regs. Generally, a taxpayer may deduct ordinary and necessary business expenses
    - 33 -
    [*33] paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on a trade or business.
    Sec. 162(a). Whether an expense constitutes an “ordinary and necessary” expense
    within the meaning of section 162 generally presents a question of fact. Commis-
    sioner v. Heininger, 
    320 U.S. 467
    , 475 (1943).
    Under section 7491(a), the burden of proof may shift to the Commissioner if
    the taxpayer produces credible evidence with respect to any relevant factual issue
    and meets other requirements. Petitioners have not argued that section 7491(a)
    applies and have not shown that they meet the requirements to shift the burden of
    proof. The burden of proof thus remains on them.
    II.   Jurisdiction
    We must first address two jurisdictional questions. Four months after post-
    trial briefing concluded, petitioners moved to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction with
    respect to PMG and the four C corporations.12 This Court is a court of limited jur-
    isdiction and may exercise jurisdiction only to the extent authorized by Congress.
    Sec. 7442; Naftel v. Commissioner, 
    85 T.C. 527
    , 529 (1985). When a jurisdic-
    tional question is raised, we must address it before deciding the case. Stewart v.
    Commissioner, 
    127 T.C. 109
    , 112 (2006).
    12
    The relevant docket numbers are 6411-07 (PMG), 6413-07 (PAI), 6414-07
    (PERC), 6499-07 (PAQ), and 6593-07 (PACE).
    - 34 -
    [*34] This Court generally has jurisdiction over a partnership-level case under
    section 6226 if: (1) the IRS issues a valid FPAA and (2) the TMP or another eli-
    gible partner timely files a petition with this Court relating to the FPAA. Rule
    240; see Harbor Cove Marina Partners P’ship v. Commissioner, 
    123 T.C. 64
    , 78
    (2004). The IRS issued a timely FPAA to PMG on December 28, 2006, and the
    TMP timely petitioned this Court on March 19, 2007.
    This Court generally has jurisdiction over a deficiency case under section
    6213 if: (1) the IRS issues the taxpayer a valid notice of deficiency and (2) the
    taxpayer timely petitions this Court. Rule 13(a), (c); see Monge v. Commissioner,
    
    93 T.C. 22
    , 27 (1989); Normac, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    90 T.C. 142
    , 147 (1988).
    The IRS issued timely notices of deficiency to the Water Companies on December
    15 and 21, 2006, and they timely petitioned this Court.
    A.     Partnership Case
    With respect to PMG, a TEFRA partnership, petitioners assert that the IRS
    failed to issue to each notice partner a timely notice of the beginning of an admin-
    istrative proceeding (NBAP), as provided in section 6223(a) and (d). This failure,
    according to petitioners, allowed PMG’s partners--namely the five S corporations-
    -to “opt out” of the TEFRA proceeding and convert the partnership items to non-
    partnership items under section 6223(e)(3)(B). Petitioners contend that these
    - 35 -
    [*35] elections deprive the Court of jurisdiction over the partnership case because
    there are no partnership items left for us to adjudicate. See sec. 6226(f).
    We note at the outset that an untimely NBAP does not invalidate the FPAA
    to which it relates. See Bedrosian v. Commissioner, 
    143 T.C. 83
    , 95 (2014) (stat-
    ing that the Commissioner’s failure to adhere to the 120-day timeframe means that
    the NBAP is untimely but does not invalidate either notice); Wind Energy Tech.
    Assocs. III v. Commissioner, 
    94 T.C. 787
    , 791-794 (1990); sec. 301.6223(e)-2(a),
    Proced. & Admin. Regs. Thus, any failure by the IRS to issue timely NBAPs to
    the notice partners did not prevent it from issuing a valid FPAA to PMG and BSC
    Leasing, Inc., the partnership’s TMP.13
    The IRS issued to PMG and its TMP, on December 28, 2006, a valid FPAA
    for 2002-2005. For tax year 2003 the record establishes that the IRS sent NBAPs
    to each notice partner more than 120 days before December 28, 2006. Thus, no
    partners were eligible to opt out for 2003, and this Court has jurisdiction over
    PMG for that year.
    For tax years 2002 and 2004, the record establishes that the IRS issued an
    NBAP to BSC Leasing, Inc., the partnership’s TMP, on April 6, 2006. That date
    13
    BSC Leasing, Inc., the one-man S corporation for Mr. Boultinghouse, is
    also referred to in this opinion as Boultinghouse, Inc.
    - 36 -
    [*36] was more than 120 days before the date on which the IRS issued the FPAA.
    Regardless of whether other partners successfully opted out, there are partnership
    items for us to adjudicate because at least one partner remains. We therefore have
    jurisdiction over PMG for 2002 and 2004.
    For tax year 2005 the parties agree that all five of PMG’s partners, including
    BSC Leasing., Inc., effectively elected out of the TEFRA proceeding. Although
    the TMP filed a valid petition,14 it appears that we lack jurisdiction over PMG’s
    2005 year because there remain no partnership items left to adjudicate.
    In seeking to have the PMG case dismissed, petitioners may be suggesting a
    backdoor statute of limitations argument to prevent the Court from determining
    the validity of certain transactions to which PMG was a nominal party. If the IRS
    mails an FPAA to the TMP, and if a partner opts out of the TEFRA proceeding
    under section 6223(e)(3), then the period of limitations on assessment as to that
    partner does not expire before one year after the partnership items are converted to
    nonpartnership items. See sec. 6229(d), (f) (cross-referencing section 6231(b)).
    14
    Electing out of the TEFRA proceeding did not preclude BSC Leasing,
    Inc., from filing a petition with the Court relating to the FPAA. Under section
    301.6231(a)(7)-1(l), Proced. & Admin. Regs., the filing of an opt-out election by a
    TMP is not listed among the actions that terminate a TMP designation.
    - 37 -
    [*37] All of PMG’s partners are S corporations which (as flow-through entities)
    could not receive notices of deficiency. The taxable parties are the five individu-
    als who are alter egos of the S corporations. Concurrently with mailing the FPAA,
    the IRS mailed notices of deficiency to all five individuals. Thus, even if the
    partnership items were deemed to have become nonpartnership items, notices of
    deficiency were mailed to the five principals while the assessment period of
    limitations remained open. See 
    ibid.
    None of the five principals was a partner (directly or indirectly) in PMG.
    See Watkins v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2014-197
    , 
    108 T.C.M. (CCH) 337
    ,
    338 (stating that individuals cannot be indirect partners in a partnership by virtue
    of their being participants in ESOPs that hold shares in S corporations holding
    partnership interests). Petitioners do not dispute that the IRS issued timely notices
    of deficiency to the five principals and to the four C corporations. All of the
    adjustments we sustain in these cases are to the income tax liabilities of the five
    principals and the four C corporations. All of them are properly subject to our
    jurisdiction.
    Since dismissal of the PMG proceeding would have no effect on our deter-
    minations and would not seem to help petitioners, the motion to dismiss as to
    PMG appears to have been improvidently filed. We nevertheless must decide
    - 38 -
    [*38] what to do with this motion. BSC Leasing, Inc., the partnership’s TMP,
    filed a timely petition under section 6226(a) as to all four years. For 2002-2004,
    partnership items remain for at least one partner, so we have jurisdiction with
    respect to the FPAA for those years. Because all the partners appear to have opted
    out for 2005, no partnership items remain for us to adjudicate, so we appear to
    lack jurisdiction with respect to the FPAA for 2005. We shall therefore deny
    petitioners’ motion to dismiss the PMG case with respect to 2002-2004 and grant
    the motion with respect to 2005. We reiterate that this has no effect on our
    jurisdiction to decide the substantive tax liabilities at issue in these cases, because
    all of the adjustments we sustain are to the income tax liabilities of the five
    principals and the four C corporations, which are properly before us in the
    deficiency cases over which we have jurisdiction.
    B.     Water Company Cases
    Petitioners contend that the notices of deficiency issued to the four C cor-
    porations--PAQ, PAI, PACE, and PERC--are invalid in part. That is assertedly so
    because the notices relate to matters that must be adjudicated in a partnership-level
    proceeding, e.g., the economic substance of PMG and the economic substance of
    transactions between the Water Companies and PMG. Alternatively, petitioners
    contend that the notices of deficiency include affected items, see sec. 6231(a)(5),
    - 39 -
    [*39] and are invalid because they were issued before the related TEFRA
    proceeding was concluded.
    We find that the notices of deficiency issued to the Water Companies are
    valid and that we have jurisdiction to adjudicate all items therein. In each notice
    of deficiency the IRS determined that the deductions claimed by the C corporation
    for “management fees” and “factoring fees” should be disallowed on one or more
    grounds, including lack of substantiation, lack of economic substance, failure to
    constitute “ordinary and necessary” expenses under section 162, and failure to
    reflect arm’s-length pricing under section 482. Petitioners are correct that the
    question whether PMG as an entity lacks economic substance is a partnership-
    level item. See Napoliello v. Commissioner, 
    655 F.3d 1060
    , 1065 (9th Cir. 2011),
    aff’g 
    T.C. Memo. 2009-104
    . But that question is entirely separate from the
    questions presented by the notices of deficiency issued to the Water Companies.
    Whether payments made by the Water Companies qualify for deduction under
    section 162 is a question properly determined in these deficiency proceedings
    because the answer to that question will determine whether the Water Companies
    correctly reported their taxable income.
    We likewise reject petitioners’ contention that the notices of deficiency is-
    sued to the Water Companies include “affected items.” The C corporations are not
    - 40 -
    [*40] partners in PMG. The notices issued to them therefore cannot possibly
    include affected items. See sec. 6231(a)(5) (“The term ‘affected item’ means any
    item to the extent such item is affected by a partnership item.”). We will
    accordingly deny petitioners’ motions to dismiss in docket Nos. 6413-07, 6414-07,
    6499-07, and 6593-07.
    III.   Deductions Claimed by the Water Companies
    Section 162(a)(1) allows a deduction for “all the ordinary and necessary ex-
    penses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or busi-
    ness,” including a “reasonable allowance for salaries or other compensation for
    personal services actually rendered.” An expense is ordinary if it is customary or
    usual within a particular trade, business, or industry or relates to a common or fre-
    quent transaction in the type of business involved. See Deputy v. du Pont, 
    308 U.S. 488
    , 495 (1940). An expense is necessary if it is appropriate and helpful to
    the operation of the taxpayer’s business. See Commissioner v. Tellier, 
    383 U.S. 687
    , 689 (1966); Carbine v. Commissioner, 
    83 T.C. 356
    , 363 (1984), aff’d, 
    777 F.2d 662
     (11th Cir. 1985).
    A.    “Factoring Fees”
    When the five principals met with Mr. Ryder in 1999, he explained that his
    “factoring program would enable the Water Companies to convert a portion of
    - 41 -
    [*41] their regular monthly business income into profits of a tax-free factoring
    entity that could be accumulated for retirement.” We conclude that the purported
    factoring arrangement with PMG had no economic substance but was a device to
    extract profits from the Water Companies in the guise of tax-deductible payments.
    The Water Companies derived no economic benefit from this arrangement, and the
    factoring fees they paid were not “ordinary and necessary” expenses of their busi-
    ness. See sec. 162(a).
    As courts have often stated, the substance of a transaction controls over its
    form. See Frank Lyon Co. v. United States, 
    435 U.S. 561
     (1978); Cooper v. Com-
    missioner, 
    877 F.3d 1086
    , 1091 (9th Cir. 2017). The U.S. Court of Appeals for
    the Ninth Circuit “generally applies a two-pronged inquiry addressing the
    objective nature of the transaction (whether it has economic substance beyond tax
    benefits) and the subjective motivation of the taxpayer (whether the taxpayer had a
    non-tax business purpose for the transaction).” Reddam v. Commissioner, 
    755 F.3d 1051
    , 1057 (9th Cir. 2014), aff’g 
    T.C. Memo. 2012-106
    . “[T]he economic
    substance doctrine is not a ‘rigid two-step analysis,’ * * * but instead focuses
    holistically on whether ‘the transaction had any practical economic effects’” other
    than creation of tax benefits. Id. at 1060 (first quoting Sacks v. Commissioner, 69
    - 42 -
    [*42] F.3d 982, 988 (9th Cir. 1995), rev’g 
    T.C. Memo. 1992-596
    , then quoting
    Sochin v. Commissioner, 
    843 F.2d 351
    , 354 (9th Cir. 1988)).
    Respondent offered, and the Court recognized, Robert Zadek as an expert in
    factoring. Mr. Zadek has extensive experience with factoring arrangements,
    having worked in the industry for more than 50 years. He operates his own
    factoring company, Lenders Funding. It provides factoring services to third-party
    clients and has a $37 million factoring portfolio. We found Mr. Zadek to be a
    knowledgeable and credible witness.
    Mr. Zadek opined that the factoring arrangement between PMG and the
    Water Companies departed in many respects from arm’s-length factoring norms.
    He first noted that the Water Companies, before embracing Mr. Ryder’s proposal,
    did no due diligence to investigate the costs and benefits of factoring. They did
    not compare the cost of factoring to the cost of securing working capital via bank
    loans. They did no comparison shopping to ascertain whether more advantageous
    factoring terms could be obtained from an independent company. And they did
    not bother to calculate the economic cost of the arrangement Mr. Ryder proposed.
    Mr. Zadek determined that the factoring fees the Water Companies paid (4%
    or 5% of the receivables’ face value), coupled with the expected turnaround time
    for collection, yielded an effective annual percentage rate (APR) of 52%. He con-
    - 43 -
    [*43] cluded that this rate was at the high end of (or above) the range of APRs that
    independent factors would have charged. The five principals’ insensitivity to
    price suggests that their true objective was not to obtain low-cost working capital
    for the Water Companies but rather (as Mr. Ryder proposed) to “convert a portion
    of their regular monthly business income into profits of a tax-free factoring
    entity.”
    In an arm’s-length factoring arrangement, the factor typically: (1) receives
    an assignment of accounts receivable from the client, (2) verifies the genuineness
    of the accounts and balances shown, and (3) immediately pays the client a lump
    sum equal to the face amount of the receivables less the agreed-upon discount.
    Mr. Zadek observed that PMG’s payment practices were erratic and regularly
    flouted these norms. On some occasions PMG would make payment before
    receiving executed assignments of the receivables and without verifying the
    account balances. On other occasions PMG would not make the stipulated upfront
    payment but would instead pay for the receivables in installments, sometimes in
    seven or eight tranches spread over many months. This was contrary to standard
    factoring practice, which aims to provide the client with immediate liquidity. The
    trial evidence supported Mr. Zadek’s conclusion that the timing of the supposed
    - 44 -
    [*44] “factoring” payments was largely dictated, not by the terms of the MFAs,
    but by “when there was money in the bank to do it,” as Ms. Quarry testified.
    Mr. Zadek pointed to other aspects of the factoring arrangement in conclud-
    ing that it did not comply with arm’s-length norms. Contrary to usual factoring
    practice, PMG received a lien only against the accounts receivable themselves, to
    the exclusion of any other assets of the Water Companies. PMG did not perfect
    even this limited security interest by a UCC filing, so that its supposed lien would
    have been ineffective against any of the Water Companies’ secured creditors. Nor
    did the Water Companies provide notification rights that would have enabled
    PMG to inform the Water Companies’ clients that their accounts had been
    assigned to it for collection.
    In a typical factoring arrangement the factor assumes responsibility for col-
    lecting the accounts that have been assigned to it. Under the PMG arrangement,
    by contrast, the Water Companies were to act as “collection agents” for PMG, the
    supposed factor. This was apparently done because the Water Companies did not
    wish their clients to know that their accounts had been “sold.”
    Both before and after implementation of the supposed “factoring” arrange-
    ment, Mr. Boultinghouse, in his capacity as CFO, was directly responsible for col-
    lecting the Water Companies’ accounts receivable, including past-due accounts. If
    - 45 -
    [*45] accounts became delinquent, Mr. Boultinghouse would direct the Water
    Companies’ employees to telephone clients to ascertain the expected payment
    date. If accounts remained delinquent, he would direct project managers or other
    high-level employees to contact the clients. If accounts became seriously
    delinquent, he would consult with the staff of the Water Companies to determine
    whether mechanics liens should be filed or a collection agency retained.
    The MFAs stipulated that PMG would “reimburse” the Water Companies
    for these collection services. But there is no evidence in the record that such
    reimbursements were ever made. Nor is there any evidence to establish how such
    reimbursements were supposed to have been calculated. Notwithstanding the
    “factoring” arrangement, the Water Companies remained 100% responsible for
    collection activity and bore 100% of the costs of collection. They thus derived no
    benefits from the “factoring” arrangement in this respect.
    As Mr. Zadek aptly noted, the factoring arrangement likewise conferred no
    liquidity benefits on the Water Companies. PMG, the supposed factor, initially
    had no meaningful capital; the total capital contributed by its five partners was
    only $2,087. Because lack of capital prevented it from engaging in “factoring” for
    the first 10 months of its existence, it did not start “factoring” until October 2000,
    - 46 -
    [*46] by which time it had received sufficient “management fees” from the Water
    Companies to supply it with the requisite cash.
    In a true factoring relationship, the factor supplies working capital and
    liquidity to the client. Here the opposite was true: The client provided working
    capital to the factor to enable the factor to do the factoring. There is no factual
    basis whatever for petitioners’ assertion that the factoring arrangement “facilitated
    working capital.” The scheme was a circular flow of funds whereby the Water
    Companies supplied liquidity to themselves.15
    Petitioners contend that the factoring arrangement had economic substance
    for three reasons. First, they contend that PMG received actual title to the ac-
    counts. Petitioners’ paperwork, however, was extremely lax; many documents
    were backdated; and PMG made no UCC filings with respect to the receivables. It
    is thus unclear from the record whether title to the receivables actually passed to
    PMG. Even if title to some receivables did pass to PMG on some occasions, mere
    passage of title does not imbue transactions with economic substance, especially
    15
    In further support of his conclusion that the “factoring” arrangement pro-
    vided no working capital benefits, Mr. Zadek noted that the Water Companies en-
    gaged in substantial inter-company lending before the PMG structure was created
    and continued to engage in substantial inter-company lending even after the fac-
    toring arrangement was put in place.
    - 47 -
    [*47] where the transactions occur between related parties. See, e.g., Feldman v.
    Commissioner, 
    779 F.3d 448
    , 456 (7th Cir. 2015), aff’g 
    T.C. Memo. 2011-297
    .16
    Second, petitioners contend that the Water Companies received cash pay-
    ments from PMG more rapidly than they would have received payment from the
    account debtors in the absence of factoring. This was not always true: In some in-
    stances, PMG paid the Water Companies in installments over many months. In
    any event, the Water Companies supplied PMG with the cash to make these
    payments. Had the Water Companies truly desired to conserve working capital,
    they would simply have held on to this cash, as well as to the $3.5 million in cash
    they wasted by paying bogus “factoring fees” to PMG.
    Third, petitioners contend that PMG suffered the risk of loss for non-
    collectible accounts. Petitioners did not establish the required factual basis for this
    argument, because the record does not show that actual title to the accounts vested
    in PMG to start with. See supra p. 46. In any event, because the Water Compa-
    nies (as opposed to PMG) were responsible for actual collection of the accounts,
    the true risk of noncollection fell on them. Since the entire scheme was a circular
    16
    Petitioners err in citing Grodt & McKay Realty, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    77 T.C. 1221
     (1981), to support their position. We there held that transactions in
    which taxpayers purportedly purchased cattle were not true sales and lacked suf-
    ficient substance, apart from tax manipulation, to be recognized for Federal tax
    purposes.
    - 48 -
    [*48] flow of funds, it does not matter on which entity’s books particular losses
    were formally recorded.
    Petitioners rely on the rebuttal report of Brett Solomon to support the eco-
    nomic substance of the “factoring” arrangement. He there asserts that: (1) the fac-
    toring arrangement facilitated meaningful working capital financing; (2) PMG’s
    factoring rate was reasonable relative to similar arm’s-length transactions; and
    (3) the factoring arrangement had sufficient formalities to be respected, making al-
    lowances for its status as a related-party transaction.
    We recognized Mr. Solomon as an expert in general financing
    arrangements, particularly with reference to the management fees that the Water
    Companies claimed as deductions. See infra pp. 50-51. Mr. Solomon has no
    particular expertise in factoring, and we found this portion of his rebuttal report
    unpersuasive. First, as explained above, the factoring arrangement provided no
    meaningful working capital financing to the Water Companies because they
    supplied the cash that enabled PMG to “factor.” Second, we found credible Mr.
    Zadek’s testimony that the APR paid by the Water Companies was not an arm’s-
    length rate but was at the high end of (or above) the range of APRs that indepen-
    dent factors would have charged. Third, the essential defect of the factoring
    scheme was not the lack of formalities (though it was extremely deficient in that
    - 49 -
    [*49] respect). Its central defect was that the Water Companies paid out $3.5
    million but received no meaningful economic benefit in return.
    For these reasons, we conclude that the purported factoring arrangement had
    no economic substance. In an objective sense, it provided no economic benefit to
    the Water Companies beyond the tax benefits they hoped to achieve by disguising
    as deductible payments what were actually distributions of corporate profits. See
    Reddam, 755 F.3d at 1057. In a subjective sense, the arrangement lacked econom-
    ic substance because the five principals had no “non-tax business purpose for the
    transaction.” Ibid. Their sole purpose was the one Mr. Ryder had urged when
    pitching his factoring scheme to them, viz, to “enable the Water Companies to
    convert a portion of their regular monthly business income into profits of a tax-
    free factoring entity that could be accumulated for retirement.”17
    Even if the Water Companies were deemed to have derived some marginal
    economic benefit from the factoring arrangement, petitioners have not shown that
    17
    Petitioners cite various authorities to support their contention that the fac-
    toring arrangement had economic substance, including section 864(d) (“Treatment
    of related person factoring income”), Rev. Rul. 66-98, 1966-
    1 C.B. 200
    , and sev-
    eral private letter rulings (PLRs). All of this material is irrelevant. Section 864(d)
    addresses when related party factoring income should be treated as subpart F in-
    come earned by a controlled foreign corporation. Revenue Ruling 66-98 refers to
    dividends from cooperatives. And the PLRs, which are not precedential, see sec.
    6110(k)(3), do not address related-party factoring arrangements.
    - 50 -
    [*50] the fees they paid were “ordinary and necessary” expenses under section
    162. Assuming arguendo that factoring were regarded as customary or “ordinary”
    within their industry, petitioners have failed to prove that expending $3.5 million
    for this purpose was “appropriate and helpful” to the operation of the Water
    Companies’ businesses. See Tellier, 
    383 U.S. at 689
    ; Carbine, 
    83 T.C. at 363
    .
    Nor have they substantiated what lesser amount would have satisfied this test.
    Petitioners have thus failed to carry their burden of proof. See INDOPCO, Inc.,
    
    503 U.S. at 84
    .18
    B.     Management Fees
    In form, the Water Companies paid management fees to PMG. PMG was a
    paper entity, and its partners--the five S corporations--were likewise paper entities.
    Neither PMG nor the S corporations provided the Water Companies with actual
    management services of any kind. Rather, they were simply vehicles for
    supplying the personal services of the five principals, who performed for the
    Water Companies during 2002-2005 essentially the same services they had
    performed as direct employees of the Water Companies previously. In assessing
    the reasonableness of the “management fees,” therefore, the question is whether
    18
    Given our disposition, we need not address respondent’s alternative con-
    tentions that the factoring fees should be reallocated under section 482 and that the
    factoring arrangement was a loan between the Water Companies and PMG.
    - 51 -
    [*51] those sums represented reasonable compensation for the personal services
    rendered by five principals or instead represented (at least in part) nondeductible
    distributions of corporate profits.
    Whether compensation for personal services is reasonable is a question of
    fact determined on the basis of all the facts and circumstances. Nor-Cal Adjusters
    v. Commissioner, 
    503 F.2d 359
    , 362 (9th Cir. 1974), aff’g 
    T.C. Memo. 1971-200
    ;
    Pac. Grains, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    399 F.2d 603
    , 605 (9th Cir. 1968), aff’g 
    T.C. Memo. 1967-7
    ; Estate of Wallace v. Commissioner, 
    95 T.C. 525
    , 553 (1990),
    aff’d, 
    965 F.2d 1038
     (11th Cir. 1992); sec. 1.162-7(a), Income Tax Regs. “The
    reasonableness concept has particular significance in determining whether
    payments between related parties * * * represent ordinary and necessary
    expenses.” Fuhrman v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2011-236
    , 
    102 T.C.M. (CCH) 347
    , 348. Petitioners bear the burden of proving the reasonableness of the
    compensation paid. See Rule 142(a).
    The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, the appellate venue in these
    cases absent stipulation to the contrary, applies five factors to determine the
    reasonableness of compensation: (1) the employee’s role in the company, (2) a
    comparison of the employee’s salary with salaries paid by similar companies for
    similar services, (3) the character and condition of the company, (4) potential con-
    - 52 -
    [*52] flicts of interest, and (5) the internal consistency of the company’s
    compensation arrangement. Elliotts, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    716 F.2d 1241
    ,
    1245-1247 (9th Cir. 1983), rev’g and remanding 
    T.C. Memo. 1980-282
    . The
    Ninth Circuit also considers whether the amounts paid would be regarded as
    reasonable by a hypothetical independent investor. See Metro Leasing & Dev.
    Corp. v. Commissioner, 
    376 F.3d 1015
    , 1019 (9th Cir. 2004), aff’g 
    119 T.C. 8
    (2002); Elliotts Inc., 
    716 F.2d at 1247
     (“If the bulk of the corporation’s earnings
    are being paid out in the form of compensation, so that the corporate profits, after
    payment of the compensation, do not represent a reasonable return on the
    shareholder’s equity in the corporation, then an independent shareholder would
    probably not approve of the compensation arrangement.”).
    Respondent has allowed deductions for some of the management fees, as
    reported by the S corporations on Forms W-2 issued to the five principals. See
    supra p. 22. Deductions for these amounts having been allowed, the disallowed
    management fee deductions consist of “additional base monthly compensation”
    and “bonuses” paid by PACE. In his post-trial briefs, respondent did not chal-
    lenge the former, and we find that he has conceded PACE’s entitlement to deduc-
    tions for additional base monthly compensation of $19,234 for 2003, $111,427 for
    - 53 -
    [*53] 2004, and $16,138 for 2005. The management fees that remain in dispute
    are thus the bonuses paid by PACE, as follows:19
    Year            Bonuses Paid
    2003             $300,000
    2004             1,250,000
    2005             2,065,000
    Respondent advances several arguments against the deductibility of these
    bonus payments, including lack of economic substance and reallocation under sec-
    tion 482. We will decide this issue on the basis of respondent’s third alternative
    contention, namely, that the bonus payments constituted unreasonable compensa-
    tion for services rendered by the five principals and hence were not “ordinary and
    necessary” business expenses under section 162.
    Both parties introduced expert testimony that addressed this question. Re-
    spondent offered, and the Court recognized, J.T. Atkins as an expert in valuation,
    financial analysis, and customary business practices. He has worked in investment
    banking for more than 29 years and currently heads an advisory firm specializing
    in mergers, acquisitions, and restructurings. He has performed dozens of
    19
    PERC paid a bonus of $20,316 in 2004. Because the notice of deficiency
    did not disallow any management fee deductions claimed by PERC for 2004, we
    need not further discuss that payment.
    - 54 -
    [*54] corporate valuations, chiefly involving companies with revenues of less than
    $200 million. We found Mr. Atkins to be a knowledgeable and credible witness.
    Respondent retained Mr. Atkins to determine the values of the Water Com-
    panies during the years at issue and to determine whether the management fees
    paid to PMG represented reasonable compensation. Employing familiar valuation
    techniques,20 Mr. Atkins determined year-end valuations for PACE as follows:
    Year            Value
    2003        $3,912,834
    2004        15,522,233
    2005        26,499,388
    Mr. Atkins evaluated the Water Companies’ profitability and bonus pay-
    ments against data from similarly situated companies using Zweig White survey
    information.21 He determined that the Water Companies frequently ranked in the
    20
    Mr. Atkins valued PACE using a “comparable company EBITDA multiple
    analysis,” a widely used valuation technique. He first determined an earnings
    multiple for a group of comparable publicly traded companies, then applied a dis-
    count to calculate an earnings multiple for PACE. He applied that multiple to
    PACE’s annual EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and
    amortization) before bonuses to determine its FMV each year.
    21
    Mr. Atkins explained that Zweig White is “an organization that tracks an-
    nual surveys of more than 175 firms” to derive data concerning “the financial per-
    formance of firms in the engineering, architecture, and environmental consulting
    industry.”
    - 55 -
    [*55] top quartile of comparable companies for revenue growth but in the bottom
    quartile for pretax profit. With respect to PACE in particular, he determined that it
    ranked in the top quartile of similarly situated companies for revenue growth, the
    top quartile for bonus payments, but the bottom quartile for pretax, after-bonus
    profit. He concluded that this inconsistency resulted mainly from the extremely
    high management fees paid to PMG. As a corollary of this determination he
    concluded that the five principals, in their capacity as shareholders of the Water
    Companies, received returns on their equity investment that were abnormally low.
    Mr. Atkins noted that the Water Companies’ gross profits steadily increased
    during the years at issue, while their net income steadily decreased. He attributed
    a substantial part of this phenomenon to excessively high management fees. He
    ultimately opined that no bonuses should have been paid at all.
    Petitioners offered, and the Court recognized, Brett Solomon as an expert in
    general financing arrangements. Mr. Solomon is currently a national director for
    Valuation Advisory Services at Cohn Reznick. He has provided numerous valua-
    tion opinions during his career and has advised many companies with respect to
    their financial arrangements.
    Mr. Solomon determined that the five principals generated considerable
    economic value for the Water Companies. But he did not perform an independent
    - 56 -
    [*56] valuation of them. Instead, he relied on a valuation performed in 2003 by
    the Strategic Equity Group (SEG) for the purpose of determining buy-in values for
    employee share purchases. For 2003 SEG valued PACE at $2.5 million, then ap-
    plied to this figure an aggregate discount of 58% for lack of control and marketa-
    bility. Employing the relatively low equity value thus determined, Mr. Solomon
    opined that a hypothetical independent investor in PACE would have received a
    reasonable return on his investment after the bonus payments were made.
    On the valuation issue we find that respondent has the better side of the ar-
    gument. Mr. Solomon did not perform an independent valuation of the Water
    Companies, and no one from SEG testified (as an expert witness or otherwise) at
    trial. The SEG valuation was prepared in 2003; it sheds no light on the proper
    valuation of PACE for 2004 and 2005, when its revenues were growing very
    rapidly. The SEG valuation was also intended for a very specific purpose: ascer-
    taining an appropriate buy-in price for employee purchases of PACE stock. Peti-
    tioners have provided no evidence to establish that a 58% discount for lack of con-
    trol and marketability would be appropriate for purposes of conducting the “rea-
    sonable compensation” analysis involved here. We will accordingly adopt the
    valuations for PACE that Mr. Atkins derived.
    - 57 -
    [*57] Although we found Mr. Atkins’ valuations and overall approach credible,
    we find it necessary to adjust his prebonus, pretax numbers in light of our holding
    regarding the “factoring fees.” Mr. Atkins based his calculations on the income
    and expenses shown on the Water Companies’ books. Because we have held that
    the “factoring fees” were not bona fide expenses but rather were distributions of
    profits, we believe these amounts must be added back to pretax income for
    purposes of conducting the “reasonable compensation” analysis.
    We will now apply the Elliotts factors to determine the extent to which
    PACE’s bonus payments were reasonable. In all cases, we use the term “em-
    ployees” to refer, not to PMG or the S corporations, but to the five principals, who
    performed all relevant services and collectively owned 100% of PACE’s stock.
    1.    Employee’s Role in the Company
    In applying this factor we consider how significant the employee is to the
    company. Elliotts, Inc., 
    716 F.2d at 1245
    . “Relevant considerations include the
    position held by the employee, hours worked, and duties performed * * * as well
    as the general importance of the employee to the success of the company.” 
    Ibid.
    The five principals were indisputably critical to the Water Companies’ suc-
    cess. Most of them had been employed by the Water Companies since the incep-
    tion of their businesses, and they were responsible for all customer relationships.
    - 58 -
    [*58] If the factors we discuss below justify the payment of bonuses, the five
    principals would be entitled to them.
    2.    Comparison of Salaries With Salaries Paid by Similar
    Companies for Similar Services
    Mr. Atkins determined that PACE’s bonus payments were excessive in all
    years, based on the Zweig White survey of similarly situated firms. We find Mr.
    Atkins’ general approach to be reasonable, but we must adjust his results for the
    factoring fees, which we add back to PACE’s pretax profit for 2003-2005. Start-
    ing with Mr. Atkins’ computations, we show below our calculation of PACE’s
    revised prebonus profit and the bonuses it paid:
    Add’l
    Atkins Pre-    Factoring      Revised Pre-   Bonuses     Bonus
    Year    Bonus Profit     Fees         Bonus Profit    Paid        as %
    2003     $516,662      $292,230        $808,892      $300,000    37.1
    2004    1,925,952       456,487        2,382,439     1,250,000   52.5
    2005    2,945,645       612,605        3,558,250     2,065,000   58.0
    Mr. Atkins determined that, for firms similarly situated to PACE, the
    median percentage of pretax profit devoted to bonus payments was approximately
    35%, 44%, and 46% for 2003, 2004, and 2005, respectively. As shown above, the
    corresponding percentages for PACE were 37.1%, 52.5%, and 58.0%.22 We ac-
    22
    These figures exclude bonuses paid to rank-and-file PACE employees.
    - 59 -
    [*59] cordingly find that the bonuses paid by PACE were higher than bonuses
    paid by comparable engineering firms.
    3.    Character and Condition of the Company
    In applying this factor we consider the bonus payments in light of “the
    company’s size as indicated by its sales, net income, or capital value.” Elliotts,
    Inc., 
    716 F.2d at 1246
    . As discussed above, the Water Companies experienced
    very rapid growth during the years at issue. PACE’s revenues in particular rose
    from $3,730,989 in 2002 to $12,240,528 in 2005, a 328% increase. As shown in
    the table on the preceding page, PACE in each year had ample pretax profits (after
    adding back factoring fees) from which to pay bonuses.
    4.    Potential Conflicts of Interest
    In applying this factor we consider “whether some relationship exists be-
    tween the taxpaying company and its employee which might permit the company
    to disguise nondeductible corporate distributions of income as salary expenditures
    deductible under section 162(a)(1).” Elliotts, Inc., 
    716 F.2d at 1246
    . That is un-
    questionably the case here. The five principals, who received the bonuses in ques-
    tion, were PACE’s sole shareholders. And the “management fees” comprising the
    bonuses were a central component of Mr. Ryder’s tax-minimization scheme,
    which the five principals implemented.
    - 60 -
    [*60] We also consider whether PACE’s postbonus profits would be considered
    adequate from the viewpoint of a hypothetical independent investor. 
    Ibid.
    Starting with Mr. Atkins’ valuations, we show below our calculation of the equity
    re-turns earned by the principals in their capacity as shareholders of PACE:
    Atkins      Revised Pre-     Bonuses     Profits for   % Return
    Year   Valuation    Bonus Profit      Paid      Shareholders   on Equity
    2003   $3,912,834    $808,892        $300,000    $508,892        13.0
    2004   15,522,223   2,382,439       1,250,000   1,132,439         7.3
    2005   26,499,388   3,558,250       2,065,000   1,493,250         5.6
    Mr. Atkins’ analysis indicates that these returns on equity were quite low for a
    firm like PACE, especially for 2004 and 2005.23 Cf. Elliotts, Inc., 712 F.2d at
    1247 (concluding that a 20% return on equity “would satisfy an independent
    investor”); Brinks Gilson & Lione v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2016-20
    , 
    111 T.C.M. (CCH) 1079
    , 1083; Normandie Metal Fabricators, Inc. v. Commissioner,
    
    T.C. Memo. 2000-102
    , 
    79 T.C.M. (CCH) 1738
    , 1747 (concluding that returns on
    equity between 2.4% and 3.3% would not satisfy an independent investor), aff’d,
    10 F. App’x 26 (2d Cir. 2001).
    23
    Mr. Atkins computed the Water Companies’ returns on equity using a
    capital asset pricing model, which determines a company’s cost of equity, i.e, its
    required rate of return from the perspective of a third-party investor.
    - 61 -
    [*61]         5.    Internal Consistency of Company’s Compensation Payments
    In applying this factor we consider whether the company maintains a “struc-
    tured, formal, consistently applied program” that evidences a “reasonable, long-
    standing, consistently applied compensation plan.” Elliotts, Inc., 
    716 F.2d at 1247
    . The Water Companies had a consistently applied bonus program for rank-
    and-file employees, who received bonuses according to a fixed schedule when
    funds were available. Under Mr. Ryder’s scheme, however, the Water Companies
    had no plan of any sort for paying bonuses to the five principals.
    None of the principals who testified at trial could explain how the bonus
    plan worked or what standards were applied. Mr. Krebs testified that there was no
    set formula or schedule for determining the principals’ bonuses. There is no
    evidence that bonuses were paid according to any regular schedule or were
    actually designed to reflect the value of the principals’ services. And petitioners
    offered no evidence as to how the principals’ bonuses (if any) were determined for
    years before 2000, when Mr. Ryder’s scheme was put into effect.24
    24
    A consideration that may be relevant in applying this fifth factor is wheth-
    er the employee-shareholder’s compensation is comparable to that of other com-
    pany employees. Elliotts, Inc., 
    716 F.2d at 1247
    . Given the distinct roles the five
    principals played in the Water Companies’ success, we find that such a compari-
    son would not be relevant or helpful here. See, e.g., Clymer v. Commissioner,
    
    T.C. Memo. 1984-203
    , 
    47 T.C.M. (CCH) 1576
    , 1583.
    - 62 -
    [*62]          6.        Conclusion
    Applying the Elliotts factors in light of the record evidence, we find that a
    portion of PACE’s bonus payments constituted reasonable compensation in each
    year. Given the absence of any structured bonus plan for the five principals, the
    existence of conflicts of interest, and the principals’ clear intention “to disguise
    nondeductible corporate distributions of income as [deductible] salary expendi-
    tures,” Elliotts, Inc., 
    716 F.2d at 1246
    , we conclude that PACE is entitled to
    deduct bonus costs that are in the lowest quartile of similarly situated engineering
    firms. Mr. Atkins determined that, for similarly situated firms, the lowest quartile
    of bonus costs divided by pretax, prebonus profit was approximately 16.6% for
    2003, 26.3% for 2004, and 15.4% for 2005. Adopting these percentages and
    running PACE’s revised prebonus profit through Mr. Atkins’ valuation methodo-
    logy, we achieve the following results:
    Atkins          Revised Pre-    Bonus    Bonuses     Profits for   % Return
    Year    Valuation        Bonus Profit     %       Allowed    Shareholders   on Equity
    2003        $3,912,834     $808,892       16.6%   $134,276     $674,616       17.2
    2004        15,522,223     2,382,439      26.3%    626,581    1,755,858       11.3
    2005    26,499,388         3,558,250      15.4%    547,971    3,010,279       11.4
    Allowing bonuses of this magnitude leaves sufficient profits in PACE to
    provide shareholder returns on equity of 17.2%, 11.3%, and 11.4% for 2003, 2004,
    - 63 -
    [*63] and 2005, respectively. The data supplied by Mr. Atkins suggest that these
    returns would be deemed adequate by a hypothetical investor in a company like
    PACE. We accordingly find and hold that PACE is entitled to deductions under
    section 162 for bonus expenses of $134,276 for 2003, $626,581 for 2004, and
    $547,971 for 2005. The balances of the bonuses paid--$165,724 for 2003,
    $623,419 for 2004, and $1,517,029 for 2005--do not represent bona fide
    compensation for services rendered but rather constituted nondeductible
    distributions of corporate profits. We have reached these conclusions “[u]sing our
    best judgment, based on all the evidence in the record.” Clymer, 47 T.C.M.
    (CCH) at 1583; see also Univ. Chevrolet Co. v. Commissioner, 
    16 T.C. 1452
    ,
    1455 (1951), aff’d, 
    199 F.2d 629
     (5th Cir. 1952); Aries Commc’n Inc. & Subs. v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2013-97
    , 
    105 T.C.M. (CCH) 1585
    , 1596.
    IV.   Consequences for the Five Principals
    In the notices of deficiency the IRS determined that the five principals had
    received unreported income by virtue of the various corporate payments discussed
    above. Respondent subsequently conceded that the unreported income amounts
    appearing in the notices of deficiency should be reduced by the salary amounts
    shown on Forms W-2 issued to the five principals. After making that offset, the
    amounts of unreported income remaining in dispute appear to be as follows:
    - 64 -
    [*64]          Principal        2002        2003     2004       2005
    Perslow           $30,664 $23,488       $46,928   $350,207
    Severson            1,056      18,969   122,477    259,259
    Krebs              61,164 173,075       137,688    217,748
    Hartwell           21,436      26,405    37,404     86,203
    Boultinghouse       -0-         -0-      -0-       304,205
    The IRS based its determinations of unreported income on four alternative
    theories: constructive dividends, assignment of income, lack of economic sub-
    stance, and lack of arm’s-length pricing under section 482. We will decide this is-
    sue chiefly on the basis of respondent’s constructive dividend theory.
    A.    Constructive Dividends
    The IRS’ determination of constructive dividend income is a determination
    of unreported income. See Coastal Heart Med. Grp., Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2015-84
    , 
    109 T.C.M. (CCH) 1424
    , 1429. The Ninth Circuit has held that
    the IRS must provide some reasonable foundation connecting the taxpayer with
    the income-producing activity. See Weimerskirch v. Commissioner, 
    596 F.2d 358
    , 360 (9th Cir. 1979), rev’g 
    67 T.C. 672
     (1977). Once the IRS has produced
    evidence linking the taxpayer with an income-producing activity, the burden of
    proof shifts to the taxpayer to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the
    - 65 -
    [*65] IRS’ determinations are arbitrary or erroneous. Helvering v. Taylor, 
    293 U.S. 507
    , 515 (1935).
    Respondent has clearly established an evidentiary foundation to shift the
    burden to petitioners. The five principals owned 100% of the Water Companies’
    stock. The funds that flowed out of the Water Companies as disguised expenses
    represented either compensation for the principals’ services or distributions, and
    those amounts were either paid to them or held and invested for their future
    benefit.
    Sections 301 and 316 govern the characterization for Federal income tax
    purposes of corporate distributions of property to shareholders. If the distributing
    corporation has sufficient earnings and profits (E&P), the distribution is a divi-
    dend that the shareholder must include in gross income. Sec. 301(c)(1). If the
    distribution exceeds the corporation’s E&P, the excess represents a nontaxable re-
    turn of capital or capital gain. Sec. 301(c)(2) and (3).
    The taxpayer bears the burden of proving that the corporation lacks suffi-
    cient E&P to support dividend treatment at the shareholder level. Truesdell v.
    Commissioner, 
    89 T.C. 1280
    , 1295-1296 (1987); Fazzio v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1991-130
    , aff’d, 
    959 F.2d 630
     (6th Cir. 1992); Zalewski v. Commissioner,
    
    T.C. Memo. 1988-340
    ; Delgado v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1988-66
    . Petition-
    - 66 -
    [*66] ers produced no evidence concerning the Water Companies’ E&P during the
    years at issue and have thus failed to satisfy their burden of proof. See Truesdell,
    
    89 T.C. at 1295
    -1296; Vlach v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2013-116
    , 
    105 T.C.M. (CCH) 1690
    , 1694 n.23. We therefore deem the Water Companies to have had,
    after add-back of the disallowed deductions for bonuses and factoring fees, suffi-
    cient E&P in each year to support dividend treatment.
    Dividends may be formally declared or constructive. A constructive divi-
    dend is an economic benefit conferred upon a shareholder by a corporation with-
    out an expectation of repayment. Truesdell, 
    89 T.C. at 1295
     (citing Noble v. Com-
    missioner, 
    368 F.2d 439
    , 443 (9th Cir. 1966), aff’g 
    T.C. Memo. 1965-84
    ). “Cor-
    porate expenditures constitute constructive dividends only if (1) the expenditures
    do not give rise to a deduction on behalf of the corporation and (2) the expendi-
    tures create ‘economic gain, benefit, or income to the owner-taxpayer.’” P.R.
    Farms, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    820 F.2d 1084
    , 1088 (9th. Cir. 1987) (quoting Me-
    ridian Wood Prods. Co. v. United States, 
    725 F.2d 1183
    , 1191 (9th Cir. 1984)),
    aff’g 
    T.C. Memo. 1984-549
    .
    Corporate payments to third parties may constitute constructive dividends if
    they are made on behalf of a shareholder or for his economic benefit. United
    States v. Mews, 
    923 F.2d 67
    , 68 (7th Cir. 1991); see, e.g., Grossman v. Commis-
    - 67 -
    [*67] sioner, 
    182 F.3d 275
     (4th Cir. 1999) (corporate payments for family
    vacations), aff’g 
    T.C. Memo. 1996-452
    ; Noble, 
    368 F.2d at 441
     (corporate
    payment for repairs and painting of shareholder’s residence and for shareholder’s
    travel expenses). The amount of the constructive dividend equals the fair market
    value of the benefit received. Challenge Mfg. Co. v. Commissioner, 
    37 T.C. 650
    ,
    663 (1962); Schank v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2015-235
    , 
    110 T.C.M. (CCH) 542
    , 548. Whether corporate expenditures are disguised dividends presents a
    question of fact. DKD Enters. v. Commissioner, 
    685 F.3d 730
    , 735 (8th Cir.
    2012), aff’g in part, rev’g in part, 
    T.C. Memo. 2011-29
    ; Schank, 110 T.C.M.
    (CCH) at 548.
    In disallowing the Water Companies’ deductions for factoring fees and the
    bulk of PACE’s claimed deductions for bonuses, we have determined that none of
    these expenditures “give[s] rise to a deduction on behalf of the corporation.” P.R.
    Farms, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    820 F.2d at 1088
    . The remaining question is
    whether these expenditures “create[d] ‘economic gain, benefit, or income to the
    owner-taxpayer.’” 
    Ibid.
     We find that they did.
    The principals hired Mr. Ryder to create a tax structure that would enable
    them to defer taxation of substantial portions of their income, paying current tax
    only on income needed to defray current living expenses. The bulk of the Water
    - 68 -
    [*68] Companies’ profits was distributed through PMG as disguised expenses and
    was invested for the principals’ benefit on a tax-free basis. It is clear that the
    funds extracted from the Water Companies in this way “create[d] ‘economic gain,
    benefit, or income to the owner-taxpayer[s].’” 
    Ibid.
    We have determined that the following amounts were not deductible by the
    Water Companies but were disguised distributions of corporate profits.
    Expense         2002        2003          2004       2005         Total
    PAQ Factoring        -0-       $505,930      $511,930   $619,395    $1,637,255
    PAI Factoring        -0-         43,463        79,756     28,182      151,401
    PACE Factoring     $350,834     292,230       456,487    612,605     1,712,156
    PACE Bonuses         -0-        165,724       623,419   1,517,029    2,306,172
    Total              350,834   1,007,347   1,671,592     2,777,211    5,806,984
    We must now apportion these amounts among the five principals. This is
    no easy task. The principals had differing ownership interests in the Water Com-
    panies, and PAI’s profits appear to have been distributed in a manner that did not
    reflect actual share ownership. The Water Companies had differing amounts of
    disallowed expenses, and those expenses differed in character (PERC, for ex-
    ample, did no “factoring”). The calculation is further complicated by the Water
    Companies’ use of different fiscal years.
    - 69 -
    [*69] Scientific accuracy being impossible, we will apportion the corporate distri-
    butions among the five principals on the basis of the S corporations’ respective
    ownership interests in PMG, which were designed to approximate the principals’
    blended ownership interests in the Water Companies. As reflected on the Sched-
    ules K-1 included in PMG’s partnership tax returns, the S corporations as of De-
    cember 31, 2002, had the following percentage ownership interests in PMG
    (amounts do not total 100% because of rounding):
    S Corporations        % Interest
    Perslow Inc.                 38.6
    Severson Inc.                27.6
    Krebs Inc.                   21.0
    Hartwell Inc.                   7.6
    Boultinghouse Inc.              5.3
    Applying these percentage ownership interests, we apportion the Water
    Companies’ disallowed expenses among the five principals as follows (amounts
    do not total exactly due to rounding of ownership percentages):
    Disallowed   Perslow      Severson      Krebs        Hartwell   B’house
    Year      Expenses    @ 38.6%      @ 27.6%      @ 21.0%       @ 7.6%     @ 5.3%
    2002      $350,834     $135,422     $96,830         $73,675    $26,663   $18,594
    2003      1,007,347     388,836     278,028         211,543     76,558    53,389
    2004      1,671,592     645,235     461,359         351,034    127,041    88,594
    - 70 -
    [*70]
    2005      2,777,211   1,072,003     766,510    583,214     211,068   147,192
    Total     5,806,984   2,241,496   1,602,727   1,219,466    441,330   307,769
    For each year in issue, the disallowed corporate expenses that we have
    apportioned to Messrs. Perslow, Severson, Krebs, and Hartwell, as shown above,
    exceed the amounts of unreported income on which the IRS seeks to tax those
    individuals. The notices of deficiency shed no light on how the IRS determined
    the amounts of unreported income, and respondent offered no explanation of his
    calculations at trial or in his post-trial briefs. Nor has respondent moved to amend
    his pleadings to assert increased deficiencies against these individuals. We ac-
    cordingly find that the following four individuals received taxable constructive
    dividends equal to the amounts of unreported income remaining in dispute, as
    follows:
    Principal        2002        2003      2004        2005
    Perslow        $30,664 $23,488 $46,928            $350,207
    Severson          1,056      18,969 122,477        259,259
    Krebs           61,164 173,075 137,688             217,748
    Hartwell        21,436       26,405    37,404       86,203
    The situation is different for Mr. Boultinghouse. Respondent has alleged no
    unreported income for him in 2002, 2003, or 2004, but alleges unreported income
    - 71 -
    [*71] of $304,205 in 2005. The disallowed corporate expenses we have
    apportioned to Mr. Boultinghouse for 2005 are only $147,192. We accordingly
    find that he received a taxable constructive dividend in 2005 of $147,192.
    B.     Assignment of Income
    We have determined that PACE is entitled to deductions for the following
    amounts of compensation for services, in addition to the salary amounts reflected
    on the Forms W-2 issued to the five principals:
    Compensation             2003        2004         2005
    Add’l base comp.         $19,234     $111,427      $16,138
    Bonuses                  134,276      626,581      547,971
    Total                  153,510      738,008      564,109
    These amounts were paid to PMG as nominal “management fees,” then dis-
    tributed (in part) to the five S corporations, then distributed (in part) to the five
    ESOPS. We must consider whether these amounts were taxable to the five princi-
    pals individually under respondent’s “assignment of income” theory. Our resolu-
    tion of this issue is properly adjudicated in the deficiency proceedings because the
    assignment of income relates to determinations with respect to the five principals
    in their deficiency cases, not to partnership items of PMG. See Hang v. Commis-
    sioner, 
    95 T.C. 74
    , 82 (1990) (holding, in the context of an S corporation then sub-
    - 72 -
    [*72] ject to TEFRA partnership procedures, that whether the taxpayer was the
    beneficial owner of the interest was a shareholder-level item); Olsen-Smith, Ltd. v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2005-174
    , 
    90 T.C.M. (CCH) 64
    , 67 (holding same in
    the context of a partnership subject to TEFRA procedures); Grigoraci v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2002-202
    , 
    84 T.C.M. (CCH) 186
    , 191.
    As explained previously, the constructive dividends we have determined
    exceed, by themselves, the amounts of unreported income that respondent con-
    tends were received by Messrs. Perslow, Severson, Krebs, and Hartwell during the
    years at issue. Because we cannot allocate to those four individuals unreported
    income in excess of the amounts set forth in the notices of deficiency, we need not
    consider respondent’s “assignment of income” argument as applied to them.
    The situation again differs for Mr. Boultinghouse. Respondent alleges that
    he received unreported income of $304,205 for 2005, but we find that he received
    constructive dividends of only $147,192 for that year. We accordingly must
    consider respondent’s “assignment of income” theory as applied to the $157,013
    balance of the alleged unreported income.
    A longstanding principle of tax law is that income is taxed to the person
    who earns it. United States v. Basye, 
    410 U.S. 441
    , 450 (1973) (“[H]e who earns
    income may not avoid taxation through anticipatory arrangements no matter how
    - 73 -
    [*73] clever or subtle[.]” (citing Lucas v. Earl, 
    281 U.S. 111
    , 115 (1930))). A
    person who earns income “cannot avoid taxation by entering into a contractual
    arrangement whereby that income is diverted to some other person or entity.” Id.
    at 449.
    Under Mr. Ryder’s tax-minimization scheme, Mr. Boultinghouse remained
    the CFO of all four Water Companies, and he continued to provide them with
    exactly the same financial and accounting services he had supplied previously.
    But now he supplied those services as an “employee” of his S corporation, which
    allegedly supplied his services to PMG, which allegedly supplied his services as
    an “independent contractor” to the Water Companies. He signed a purported
    “agreement of employment” with his S corporation, but that document did not
    specify what position he was to hold or what duties he was to perform. Rather, it
    simply recited that he would “render and perform services under the direction and
    designation of” his S corporation. Because his S corporation was a paper entity
    and functionally his alter ego, that recitation was meaningless. In reality, he
    performed services for the Water Companies “under the direction and designation”
    of himself.
    The “agreement of employment,” like PMG’s purported agreement to pro-
    vide Mr. Boultinghouse’s services as an “independent contractor” to the Water
    - 74 -
    [*74] Companies, did not in any meaningful way change the employer-employee
    relationship he had with those corporations. Mr. Ryder’s tax-minimization plan
    was a classic “assignment of income” scheme whereby Mr. Boultinghouse used a
    series of contractual arrangements to divert salary income that would otherwise
    have flowed directly to him. See Basye, 
    410 U.S. at 450
    . But no anticipatory
    arrangement can hide the fact that his share of the management fees was in
    substance earned by and owed to him.
    We recognize the principle that a corporation (including an S corporation)
    is a separate taxable entity. See Moline Props., Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    319 U.S. 436
    , 439 (1943). But the relevant question is not simply “who earned the income”
    but rather “who controls the earning of the income.” See Johnson v. Commission-
    er, 
    78 T.C. 882
    , 891 (1982) (citing Vercio v. Commissioner, 
    73 T.C. 1246
    , 1254-
    1255 (1980)), aff’d without published opinion, 
    734 F.2d 20
     (9th Cir. 1984); Fleis-
    cher v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2016-238
    , 
    112 T.C.M. (CCH) 723
    , 725.
    In a setting such as this, two elements are generally required before the
    corporation will be regarded as the party that controls the earning of the income:
    (1) the corporation must be able to direct and control the employee in a meaning-
    ful way and (2) “there must exist between the corporation and the person or entity
    using the services a contract or similar indicium recognizing the corporation’s
    - 75 -
    [*75] controlling position.” Johnson, 
    78 T.C. at 891
    ; see Idaho Ambucare Ctr.,
    Inc. v. United States, 
    57 F.3d 752
    , 754-755 (9th Cir. 1995) (same).
    We find that the first requirement is not satisfied here because Boulting-
    house Inc., the S corporation, was not able to (and did not in fact) “direct and
    control” Mr. Boultinghouse in any meaningful way. The S corporation was a
    paper entity. His purported “agreement of employment” with it did not specify
    what position he was to hold or what duties he was to perform. And far from
    rendering his services under the “direction and designation of” his S corporation,
    he in fact supervised his own employment by directing the day-to-day activities of
    the Water Companies. The documents Mr. Ryder drafted were not worth the paper
    they were printed on. They were designed to create, and they had the effect of
    producing, an anticipatory assignment of Mr. Boultinghouse’s income to a tax-
    exempt entity Mr. Ryder had created for that purpose. See Vnuk v. Commissioner,
    
    621 F.2d 1318
    , 1320-1321 (8th Cir. 1980), aff’g 
    T.C. Memo. 1979-164
    .
    In sum, we conclude that the assignment-of-income principle is fully appli-
    cable here because Mr. Boultinghouse’s S corporation was not able to (and did not
    in fact) “direct or control in some meaningful sense the activities of the service
    provider.” Idaho Ambucare Ctr., Inc., 
    57 F.3d at 754-755
    ; Johnson, 
    78 T.C. at 891
    - 76 -
    [*76] (same).25 Once again, we must apportion to Mr. Boultinghouse his ratable
    share of the $564,109 additional compensation that we have allowed the Water
    Companies to deduct for 2005. For lack of any better evidence, we will again
    consider Boultinghouse Inc.’s ownership interest in PMG, which was designed to
    approximate Mr. Boultinghouse’s blended ownership interests in the Water
    Companies. That percentage interest being 5.3%, we find that Mr. Boultinghouse
    for 2005 is taxable under the assignment-of-income doctrine on unreported income
    of $29,898 (.053 × $564,109).
    V.    PMG
    In light of our holdings above with respect to the Water Companies and the
    five principals, we need not address any of respondent’s determinations in the
    FPAA issued to PMG. The Water Companies and the principals are the only
    taxpaying persons in these cases. Having adjudicated all items in the notices of
    deficiency issued to them, we have no reason to discuss any of respondent’s
    arguments in the FPAA, which respondent tendered as alternative grounds for
    ruling in his favor.
    25
    In view of our disposition, we need not address whether the second re-
    quirement of the Johnson test is met, viz, whether there existed a bona fide “con-
    tract or similar indicium recognizing the corporation’s controlling position.”
    Johnson, 
    78 T.C. at 891
    .
    - 77 -
    [*77] To reflect the foregoing,
    Decisions will be entered under
    Rule 155.
    - 78 -
    [*78]                           APPENDIX A
    Johan A. Perslow, docket No. 28655-11; Mark E. Krebs & Janet Torrey B. Krebs,
    docket No. 29777-11; Pacific Environmental Resources Corporation, docket No.
    3264-12; Gary J. Tolosa & Zoila M. Tolosa, docket No. 13818-12; Derek H.
    Karimoto & Debbie J. Karimoto, docket No. 13819-12; Andrew D. Komor &
    Summer J. Komor, docket No. 13820-12; Mark E. Krebs & Janet B. Krebs, docket
    No. 13821-12; Michael G. Krebs & Laura M. Krebs, docket No. 13822-12; James
    A. Matthews, Jr. & Kristen L. Matthews, docket No. 13823-12; Johan A. Perslow,
    docket No. 13824-12; Bruce M. Phillips & Laura K. Phillips, docket No. 13825-
    12; Cory M. Severson & Rochelle L. Severson, docket No. 13826-12; Sonny O.
    Sim & Emily C. Ang, docket No. 13827-12; Pacific Aquascape California
    Incorporated, docket No. 5064-13; Sonny O. Sim & Emily A. Sim, docket No.
    15201-13; Gary J. Tolosa & Zoila M. Tolosa, docket No. 15202-13; Water
    Specialty Group Incorporated a.k.a. Water Specialty Group, docket No. 20708-13;
    Perc Water Corporation & Subsidiaries a.k.a. Perc Water Corporation, docket No.
    20709-13; Pacific Environmental Resources Corporation, a Arizona Corporation
    (Perc), docket No. 20710-13; Michael G. Krebs & Laura M. Krebs, docket No.
    21956-13; Mark E. Krebs & Janet Torrey Krebs, docket No. 21957-13; Gary J.
    Tolosa & Zoila M. Tolosa, docket No. 21958-13; Cory M. Severson & Rochelle L.
    Severson, docket No. 21959-13; Sonny O. Sim & Emily A. Sim, docket No.
    21960-13; Bruce M. Phillips and Laura K. Phillips, Deceased, docket No. 21961-
    13; James A. Matthews, Jr. & Kristen L. Matthews, docket No. 21962-13; Andrew
    T. Komor & Summer J. Komor, docket No. 21963-13; Derek H. Karimoto &
    Debbie J. Karimoto, docket No. 21964-13; and Johan A. Perslow, docket No.
    21965-13.
    - 79 -
    [*79]                               APPENDIX B
    Cory M. Severson & Rochelle Severson, docket No. 6412-07: Respondent con-
    cedes that petitioners did not have unreported ordinary dividend income of
    $12,159 for 2005. Petitioners concede that they have unreported constructive
    dividend income of $3,004, $5,866, $16,602, and $2,388, for 2002-2005, respec-
    tively.
    Pacific Aquascape International, Inc., docket No. 6413-07: Petitioner concedes
    that it is not entitled to claim interest expense deductions in the amounts of
    $16,504, $2,012, and $9,625, for 2003-2005, respectively. Respondent concedes
    that petitioner is entitled to deductions for facility costs in the amounts of $14,479,
    $23,511, and $6,426, for 2003-2005, respectively.
    Pacific Environmental Resources, Corp., docket No. 6414-07: Petitioner concedes
    that it is not entitled to claim deductions for personal expenses of $49,685 for
    2005.
    Mark E. Krebs & Janet B. Krebs, docket No. 6494-07: Respondent concedes that
    petitioners are entitled to an additional capital loss deduction of $5,401 for 2003;
    that they did not have unreported capital gains income of $40,479 for 2005; and
    that they did not have unreported ordinary dividend income of $9,391 for 2005.
    Petitioners concede that they have unreported constructive dividend income of
    $8,508, $5,009, $7,937, and $22,252, for 2002-2005, respectively.
    Johan A. Perslow & Marie Majkgard Perslow, docket No. 6498-07: Petitioners
    concede they are liable for an addition to tax under section 6651(a)(1) of $2,986
    for 2003. Petitioners concede that they have unreported constructive dividend
    income of $20,312, $18,000, and $37,440, for 2002-2004, respectively.
    Pacific Aquascape, Inc., docket No. 6499-07: Petitioner concedes that it is not
    entitled to claim deductions for personal expenses in the amounts of $5,135,
    $11,092, and $24,898, for 2003-2005, respectively and that it is not entitled to
    claim a deduction for marketing expenses paid to PAI in the amount of $300,000
    for 2005. Petitioner also concedes that it is not entitled to claim interest expense
    deductions in the amounts of $12,351, $7,032, and $24,813, for 2003-2005, re-
    - 80 -
    [*80] spectively, and that it is not entitled to claim a net operating loss deduction
    of $53,162 for 2003.
    Pacific Advanced Civil Engineering, Inc., docket No. 6593-07: Petitioner con-
    cedes that it is not entitled to claim deductions for personal expenses in the
    amounts of $32,871, $57,128, $37,389, and $99,556, for 2002-2005, respectively;
    that it is not entitled to claim deductions under section 179 for qualified asset
    purchases in the amounts of $4,977, $24,912, $130,638, and $294,304, for 2002-
    2005, respectively; and that it is entitled to claim depreciation deductions in the
    amounts of $249, $6,874, $15,638, and $113,967, for 2002-2005, respectively.
    Petitioner also concedes that it is not entitled to claim interest expense deductions
    in the amounts of $13,104, $13,189, and $1,095 for 2002, 2003, and 2005, respec-
    tively.
    Richard F. Boultinghouse & Loraine Boultinghouse, docket No. 6594-07: Peti-
    tioners concede that they are not entitled to claim a net operating loss carryforward
    deduction of $193,701 for 2005.
    Johan A. Perslow, docket No. 6596-07: Petitioner concedes that he is liable for an
    addition to tax under section 6651(a)(1) of $13,844 for 2005. Petitioner concedes
    that he has unreported constructive dividend income of $421,187 for 2005.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 6411-07, 6412-07, 6413-07, 6414-07, 6494-07, 6498-07, 6499-07, 6592-07, 6593-07, 6594-07, 6596-07

Citation Numbers: 2018 T.C. Memo. 131

Filed Date: 8/20/2018

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021

Authorities (35)

Grodt & McKay Realty, Inc. v. Commissioner , 77 T.C. 1221 ( 1981 )

Cornelius G. Noble and Pansy H. Noble v. Commissioner of ... , 368 F.2d 439 ( 1966 )

Johnny Weimerskirch v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 596 F.2d 358 ( 1979 )

University Chevrolet Co., Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal ... , 199 F.2d 629 ( 1952 )

Meridian Wood Products Co., Inc., a Corporation v. United ... , 725 F.2d 1183 ( 1984 )

Frank A. Fazzio v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 959 F.2d 630 ( 1992 )

Idaho Ambucare Center, Inc. v. United States , 57 F.3d 752 ( 1995 )

Pacific Grains, Inc., an Oregon Corporation v. Commissioner ... , 399 F.2d 603 ( 1968 )

Estate of Gerald L. Wallace, Deceased, Celia A. Wallace, ... , 965 F.2d 1038 ( 1992 )

P.R. Farms, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue Service , 820 F.2d 1084 ( 1987 )

Indopco, Inc. v. Commissioner , 112 S. Ct. 1039 ( 1992 )

University Chevrolet Co. v. Commissioner , 16 T.C. 1452 ( 1951 )

Weimerskirch v. Commissioner , 67 T.C. 672 ( 1977 )

Estate of Wallace v. Commissioner , 95 T.C. 525 ( 1990 )

535 Ramona Inc. v. Commissioner , 135 T.C. 353 ( 2010 )

New Colonial Ice Co. v. Helvering , 54 S. Ct. 788 ( 1934 )

Robert D. Grossman, Jr. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 161 A.L.R. Fed. 755 ( 1999 )

Wallace J. Vnuk and Frances R. Vnuk v. Commissioner of ... , 621 F.2d 1318 ( 1980 )

Deputy, Administratrix v. Du Pont , 60 S. Ct. 363 ( 1940 )

Metro Leasing and Development Corporation East Bay ... , 376 F.3d 1015 ( 2004 )

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